Antibiotics (Sep 2020)

Antimicrobial Resistance in Fecal <i>Escherichia coli</i> from Humans and Pigs at Farms at Different Levels of Intensification

  • Kamonwan Lunha,
  • Thongpan Leangapichart,
  • Jatesada Jiwakanon,
  • Sunpetch Angkititrakul,
  • Marianne Sunde,
  • Josef D. Järhult,
  • Gunilla Ström Hallenberg,
  • Rachel A. Hickman,
  • Thomas Van Boeckel,
  • Ulf Magnusson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics9100662
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 10
p. 662

Abstract

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The overall aim of the current study was to test the hypotheses that (i) antibiotic resistance in bacteria were more frequent in clinically health pigs in intensified company owned, medium-scale farms (MSFs) (100–500 sows) than in pigs in family-owned, small-scale farms (SSFs) (1–50 sows) and (ii) that farmers working at the MSFs were more prone to attain antibiotic resistant bacteria than farmers working at SSFs. The study was conducted in North-Eastern Thailand, comprising fecal Escherichia coli isolates from pigs, farmers working with the pigs (contact humans) and persons living in the same household as the farmer (non-contact humans) at 51 MSFs and 113 SSFs. Samples from all farms were also screened for methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), which was not detected in pig samples, but was found in one human sample. Susceptibility was tested by disc-diffusion for seven antibiotics commonly used in the study area. Resistance in pig isolates from MSFs were more frequent for chloramphenicol which (P P P P P P E. coli from pigs at the MSFs than at the SSFs, whereas (ii) the resistance in fecal E. coli from pig farmers seemed not to be influenced by the level of intensification of the farm they were working at.

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