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Sudan Journal of Medical Sciences. 2011; 6 (2): 97-101
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-132059
ABSTRACT
The emergence of resistance to drugs used to treat tuberculosis [TB], and particularly multidrug-resistant TB [MDR-TB], has become a significant public health problem in a number of countries and an obstacle to effective global TB control. This is a prospective randomized cross sectional study to estimate the magnitude of MDR tuberculosis in two hospitals in Khartoum, Sudan. 111 patients who had defaulted their tuberculosis treatment on previous occasions and had presented to the hospital with several symptoms were studied. All patients provided sputum, which was examined for the presence of acid fast bacilli [AFB] by Ziehl- Neelsen stain. Sputa were also sent to the reference laboratory for mycobacterial culture and drug susceptibility testing. All culture positive sputa had drug sensitivity tested to the first line anti-TB drugs used in Sudan namely Streptomycin, Isoniazid, Rifampicin and Ethambutol. Out of the 111 patients, 297% [n=33] were AFB sputum smear positive and 40.5% [n=45] were sputum culture positive for mycobacterium. Sensitivity testing revealed that 48.9% [n=22] were resistant to Streptomycin, 62.2% [n=28] were resistant to Isoniazid, 55.6 [n=25] were resistant to Rifampicin and 37.8% [n=17] were resistant to Ethambutol. 42% [n19] of the patients were resistant to Rifampicin and Isoniazid only, while 26.6% [n=12] were resistant to all the first line drugs [Streptomycin, Isoniazid, Rifampicin and Ethambutol] this study showed that the prevalence of MDR tuberculosis among the defaulters in Kartoum is much higher than what was reported previously. This study highlights the extent of the problem of drug resistance in Khartoum and emphasizes the need for proper treatment and strengthening of the short course direct observed therapy strategy
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Index: IMEMR (Eastern Mediterranean) Type of study: Prevalence study Language: English Journal: Sudan J. Med. Sci. Year: 2011

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Index: IMEMR (Eastern Mediterranean) Type of study: Prevalence study Language: English Journal: Sudan J. Med. Sci. Year: 2011