News

Cases of Clindamycin-Resistant MRSA Seen in U.S.


 

In 2001, the nasal carriage rate of MSSA was 28% and the nasal carriage rate of MRSA was just 0.8%. “We had a small—but important—reservoir of MRSA in our community,” Dr. Creech said.

The 2004 follow-up study revealed a 10-fold increase in MRSA nasal carriage. Of the 500 children swabbed, 46 (9.2%) were colonized with MRSA.

Of the 46 MRSA isolates, 45 were susceptible to rifampin, gentamicin, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. However, 25 (54%) were resistant to erythromycin and 12 (26%) were resistant to clindamycin.

Of the erythromycin-resistant isolates, eight (32%) showed characteristics of inducible resistance by the disk diffusion test. Only 4 of the 46 isolates (8%) expressed constitutive resistance to clindamycin.

Ten of the 46 isolates (21%) were positive for the cytotoxin PVL.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Food-Borne Infections Evade Common Defenses : When chicken was frozen for 1 week, about 10% of the Campylobacter jejuni population still survived.
MDedge Family Medicine
It's Summertime: Be on the Lookout for Seafood Poisoning
MDedge Family Medicine
West Nile Virus Doesn't Play by the Rules of IgM
MDedge Family Medicine
Resistance Increasing to Standard UTI Treatment
MDedge Family Medicine
Shorter Antibiotic Course For Childhood UTI Possible
MDedge Family Medicine
High-Dose Valacyclovir Reduced Shedding of Oral Herpes Virus
MDedge Family Medicine
Only 10% of Teens Retested After Chlamydia Treatment
MDedge Family Medicine
Green Tea Ointment May Clear Genital Warts
MDedge Family Medicine
Multidrug-Resistant TB Persists Among Immigrants
MDedge Family Medicine
Computer Keyboards Act as Bacteria Reservoir
MDedge Family Medicine