Abstract

Tetracycline resistance genes in Kenyan hospital isolates of Salmonella typhimurium

Kariuki S, Mirza NB, Wasteson Y, Senerwa D, Gathuma JM, Olsvik O
APMIS. 1992;100

Permenent descriptor
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1699-0463.1992.tb03977.x


All 97 strains of Salmonella typhimurium isolated from patients at a hospital in Nairobi, Kenya, during 1988-90 were resistant to tetracycline. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) showed a large distribution range from 1 microgram/ml to 128 micrograms/ml. The strains were heterogeneous with respect to plasmid content, but initially all strains possessed, in addition to other plasmids, a large 60-, 63- or 65-MDa plasmid. The tetracycline resistance genes were characterized using oligonucleotide probes, and 20% of the resistant strains possessed tetracycline type A (tetr A), 6% tetr B, and 4% tetrC genes. Three strains possessed both type A and B tetracycline resistance determinants, which were shown to be located on the large 65-MDa plasmid. There was no correlation between strains isolated from stools, blood, cerebrospinal or epidural fluids, pus, or urine, with respect to the tetracycline genotypes, MIC values or plasmid content.