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spa typing and antimicrobial resistance of staphylococcus aureus from healthy humans, pigs and dogs in Tanzania

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dc.creator Katakweba, A. S.
dc.creator Muhairwa, A. P.
dc.creator Espinosa -Gongora, C.
dc.creator Guardabassi, L.
dc.creator Mtambo, M. A.
dc.creator Olsen, J. E.
dc.date 2018-06-12T16:07:30Z
dc.date 2018-06-12T16:07:30Z
dc.date 2016-07
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:50:33Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:50:33Z
dc.identifier 143-148
dc.identifier https://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/2295
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/90351
dc.description The Journal Infection Developing Countries
dc.description Introduction: Staphylococcus aureus is an opportunistic pathogen causing infections in humans and animals. Here we report for the first time the prevalence of nasal carriage, spa typing and antimicrobial resistance of S. aureus in a Tanzanian livestock community. Methodology: Nasal swabs were taken from 100 humans, 100 pigs and 100 dogs in Morogoro Municipal. Each swab was enriched in Mueller Hinton broth with 6.5% NaCl and subcultured on chromogenic agar for S. aureus detection. Presumptive S. aureus colonies were confirmed to the species level by nuc PCR and analysed by spa typing. Antimicrobial susceptibility patterns were determined by disc diffusion method. Results: S. aureus was isolated from 22 % of humans, 4 % of pigs and 11 % of dogs. A total of 21 spa types were identified: 13, 7 and 1 in human, dogs, and pigs, respectively. Three spa types (t314, t223 and t084) were shared between humans and dogs. A novel spa type (t10779) was identified in an isolate recovered from a colonized human. Antimicrobials tested revealed resistance to ampicillin in all isolates, moderate resistances to other antimicrobials with tetracycline resistance being the most frequent. Conclusion: S. aureus carrier frequencies in dogs and humans were within the expected range and low in pigs. The S. aureus spa types circulating in the community were generally not shared by different hosts and majority of types belonged to known clones. Besides ampicillin resistance, moderate levels of antimicrobial resistance were observed irrespective of the host species from which the strains were isolated.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher The Journal Infection Developing Countries
dc.subject Antimicrobials
dc.subject Genotyping
dc.subject S. aureus
dc.subject Tanzania
dc.title spa typing and antimicrobial resistance of staphylococcus aureus from healthy humans, pigs and dogs in Tanzania
dc.type Article


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