The Turkish Journal of Pediatrics (Oct 2007)

Nasopharyngeal carriage of penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae in healthy children

  • Arzu Uzuner,
  • Arzu Ilki,
  • Mehmet Akman,
  • Ercan Gündoğdu,
  • Riza Erbölükbaş,
  • Omer Kokaçya,
  • Türkan Mengüç,
  • Sibel Kalaça,
  • Güner Söyletir

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 49, no. 4

Abstract

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Streptococcus pneumoniae carriage is a risk factor for the development of respiratory system infections and the spread of penicillin-resistant strains. The aim of this study was to investigate nasopharyngeal carriage of S. pneumoniae in healthy children and resistance to penicillin and other antimicrobials and to assess related risk factors. Nasopharyngeal specimens collected from healthy children less than six years of age, visiting a Mother and Child Health Center for health control, were investigated microbiologically between February-March 2004. Carriage rate was 37.2% (n=112/301); 33.9% intermediate and 5.4% high penicillin resistance were detected. According to multivariate analysis, carriage rate was inversely related to number of rooms (OR:0.574) and child age (OR:0.978), while penicillin resistance was correlated well with antibiotic use in the last two months (OR:2.193). Decreased sensitivity plus resistance to other antimicrobials were: trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) 45.6%; erythromycin 16.1%, tetracycline 16.1%; clindamycin 9.8%, and ofloxacin 3.6% in pneumococcal isolates, which increased significantly (p