Characterization of CTX-M-14 and CTX-M-15 producing Escherichia coli strains causing neonatal sepsis

Publication date

2017-05-03T07:47:51Z

2017-05-03T07:47:51Z

2014-01-31

2017-05-03T07:47:51Z

Abstract

Neonatal sepsis is a disease affecting newborns ≤1 month of age with clinical symptoms and positive blood cultures. The number of Escherichia coli strains causing neonatal sepsis resistant to the antibiotics used in the treatment is increasing. In this study, two E. coli strains causing sepsis in neonates of mothers infected with an E. coli strain harboring extended spectrum beta-lactamases were characterized. The blaCTX-M-15 and the blaCTX-M-14 genes were found in an IncFIA and nontypeable transferable plasmids, respectively. In addition, these highly virulent strains belonged to ST705 and ST156 clonal groups, respectively. The presence of strains, which are highly virulent and resistant to ampicillin, gentamicin, and cephalosporins, makes a change in empirical treatment necessary as well as an increase in the surveillance of these infections.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Mary Ann Liebert

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1089/mdr.2013.0190.

Microbial Drug Resistance, 2014, vol. 20, num. 4, p. 281-284

https://doi.org/10.1089/mdr.2013.0190.

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(c) Mary Ann Liebert, 2014

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