Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz (Oct 2000)

Multiple isolates from Aids patients: aspects of an analysis by a genotypic marker and antimicrobial susceptibilities variations

  • Maria Helena Féres Saad,
  • Maria Alice Telles,
  • Fátima Porfirio,
  • Lucilaine Ferrazoli,
  • Leila de Souza Fonseca,
  • Warren Johnson Jr,
  • Lee W Riley

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0074-02762000000500021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 95, no. 5
pp. 729 – 732

Abstract

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Twenty-one Mycobacterium avium multisolates, from ten human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients, were typed by restriction fragment length polymorphism using as marker the IS1245 and characterized by minimum inhibitory concentration for nine different antibiotics. Two out of four patients harboring multisolates with different fingerprint profile, were therefore considered as having a polyclonal infection, since their isolates were taken from sterile site. This result confirms that polyclonal infection caused by M. avium occurs with a nonnegligenciable frequency. Analyzing the multisolates susceptibility profile of each patient it was observed that most of them were infected with strains having appreciably different antimicrobial susceptibility patterns, no matter what the genotypic pattern of the strains was. These results have strong implication for the treatment of the patients.

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