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Rev. argent. microbiol ; 54(3): 81-90, set. 2022. graf
Artigo em Inglês | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1407198

RESUMO

Abstract There is limited information about the prevalence and antimicrobial susceptibility of coagulase-positive Staphylococcus (CoPS) strains in veterinary settings in Chile. The aim of this observational study was to identify and characterize CoPS strains from dogs, owners, veterinary professionals and surfaces in a veterinary teaching hospital at Universidad de Chile to determine the presence of methicillin-resistant strains and evaluate the genetic relationship among the strains. Veterinarians (n = 24), surfaces (n = 10), and healthy dogs (n = 40) and their respective owners (n = 40) were sampled for CoPS. Isolates were identified by PCRand antimicrobial susceptibility was assessed by the disk diffusion method and MIC. The presence of the mecA gene was evaluated by PCR, and the genetic relationship among the strains was established by PFGE. A total of 45 CoPS strains were obtained, eight from veterinary professionals, three from hospital surfaces, eight from owners and 26 from dogs. Nine of the strains were resistant to methicillin (20%), and all of them carried the mecA gene. A high percentage of the strains was resistant to clindamycin (33.3%). Additionally, the isolated CoPS showed high genetic diversity. This study suggests that veterinarians are in high risk of harboring methicillin-resistant CoPS (25% versus 2.5% from owners) and our results provide evidence that clindamycin could not be an empiric alternative for CoPS in the analyzed hospital. This is the first report of methicillin-resistant CoPS in veterinary settings in Chile, considering humans, pets and surfaces.


Resumen Existe información limitada sobre prevalencia y sensibilidad antimicrobiana de cepas de Staphylococcus coagulasa-positivas (CoPS) en entornos veterinarios en Chile. El objetivo de este estudio observacional fue identificar y caracterizar cepas CoPS de perros, duenos, veterinarios y superficies de un hospital veterinario de la Universidad de Chile, determinar la presencia de cepas meticilino-resistentes y evaluar la relación genética entre las cepas. Se colectaron muestras de veterinarios (n = 24), de superficies hospitalarias (n = 10) y de perros sanos (n =40) y sus respectivos duenos (n = 40). Los aislamientos se identificaron mediante PCR y la sensibilidad antimicrobiana se evaluó por difusión en discos y CIM. También se empleó PCR para detectar la presencia del gen mecA; la relación genética entre las cepas se estableció mediante electroforesis de campos pulsantes (PFGE). Se obtuvo un total de 45 cepas de CoPS, 8 de veterinarios, 3 de superficies hospitalarias, 8 de duenos y 26 de perros. Nueve cepas fueron meticilino-resistentes (20%), todas portadoras del gen mecA. Un porcentaje importante de cepas fue resistente a clindamicina (33,3%). Además, las cepas aisladas mostraron una alta diversidad genética. Este estudio sugiere que los veterinarios tienen alto riesgo de portar CoPS resistentes a meticilina (25% versus 2,5% propietarios). Asimismo, nuestros resultados proporcionan evidencia de que la clindamicina podría no ser una alternativa empírica para CoPS en el hospital analizado. Este es el primer estudio de CoPS meticilino-resistentes en entornos veterinarios en Chile que considera humanos, mascotas y superficies.

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