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Indian Journal of Medical Microbiology
Medknow Publications on behalf of Indian Association of Medical Microbiology
ISSN: 0255-0857
EISSN: 0255-0857
Vol. 28, No. 2, 2010, pp. 124-126
Bioline Code: mb10038
Full paper language: English
Document type: Research Article
Document available free of charge

Indian Journal of Medical Microbiology, Vol. 28, No. 2, 2010, pp. 124-126

 en Inducible clindamycin resistance in Staphylococcus aureus check for this species in other resources isolated from clinical samples
Deotale, V.; Mendiratta, D.K.; Raut, U. & Narang, P.

Abstract

Purpose: Clindamycin is commonly used in the treatment of erythromycin resistant Staphylococcus aureus check for this species in other resources causing skin and soft tissue infections. In vitro routine tests for clindamycin susceptibility may fail to detect inducible clindamycin resistance due to erm genes resulting in treatment failure, thus necessitating the need to detect such resistance by a simple D test on routine basis.
Materials and Method: 247 Staphylococcus aureus isolates were subjected to routine antibiotic susceptibility testing including oxacillin (1ìg) by Kirby Bauer disc diffusion method. Inducible clindamycin resistance was detected by D test, as per CLSI guidelines on erythromycin resistant isolates.
Results: 36 (14.5%) isolates showed inducible clindamycin resistance, nine (3.6%) showed constitutive resistance while remaining 35 (14.1%) showed MS phenotype. Inducible resistance and MS phenotype were found to be higher in MRSA as compared to MSSA (27.6%, 24.3% and 1.6%, 4% respectively).
Conclusion: Study showed that D test should be used as a mandatory method in routine disc diffusion testing to detect inducible clindamycin resistance.

Keywords
Clindamycin resistance, constitutive MLSB phenotype, inducible MLSB phenotype, MRSA, MS phenotype

 
© Copyright 2010 Indian Journal of Medical Microbiology.
Alternative site location: http://www.ijmm.org

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