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IBJ-Iranian Biomedical Journal. 2015; 19 (3): 143-148
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-166923

ABSTRACT

Reduced susceptibility of Clostridium difficile to antibiotics is problematic in clinical settings. There is new evidence indicating the cotransfer of toxin-encoding genes and conjugative transposons encoding resistance to antibiotics among different C. difficile strains. To analyze this association, in the current study, we evaluated the frequency of toxigenic C. difficile among the strains with different multidrug-resistant [MDR] profiles in Iran. Antimicrobial susceptibility patterns and minimal inhibitory concentrations [MIC] of the isolates were determined against metronidazole, imipenem, ceftazidime, amikacin, and ciprofloxacin by agar dilution method. The association of the resistance profiles and toxigenicity of the strains were studied by PCR targeting tcdA and tcdB genes. Among 86 characterized strains, the highest and lowest resistance rates were related to ciprofloxacin [97%] and metronidazole [5%], respectively. The frequency of resistance to other antibiotics was as follow: imipenem [48%], ceftazidime [76%], and amikacin [76.5%]. Among the resistant strains, double drug resistance and MDR phenotypes were detected in the frequencies of 10.4% and 66.2%, respectively. All of the metronidazole-resistant strains belonged to tcdA [+]/tcdB[+] genotype with triple or quintuple drug resistance phenotypes. MIC[50] and MIC[90] for this antibiotic was equally

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