Acta Médica del Centro (Jul 2012)

Enterococcus isolates in clinical samples

  • Isabel de la Concepción Gorrín Alemán,
  • Robin Rodríguez Pérez,
  • José Antonio Rodríguez Rodríguez,
  • Dianelys Quiñones Pérez

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 3
pp. 32 – 37

Abstract

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In recent years, the genus Enterococcus has become extremely important as an etiologic agent of nosocomial infections and the acquisition of resistance to many antibiotics. A descriptive, retrospective and longitudinal study was conducted in order to characterize the isolates of Enterococcus in clinical samples grown in the Microbiology Laboratory of the Arnaldo Milian Castro Provincial University Hospital in 2009. To gather the information, the results of laboratory cultures at this stage were reviewed. This search was made in the Record Books of daily work. The isolates that were considered were those that met the following criteria: all lab-grown sample in this period whose result in the culture showed the isolation of Enterococcus and which had undergone a susceptibility study. The universe was formed by 32500 samples, and this organism was isolated in only 31 of them. The 31 cultures that were positive for the genus of interest were separated in number and according to the different categories of body fluids: secretions –18 isolates; urine –four; blood –four; bile –four; and catheter –one. They were predominant in secretions (58.06% of total). Enterococcus faecalis and Enterococcus faecium were the most isolated species. Susceptibility testing showed increased resistance to erythromycin (58.06%) and tetracycline (51.62%) and only one strain of Enterococcus faecium was diagnosed as resistant to vancomycin (3.24% of strains tested).

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