CHANGING PATTERNS OF ANTIBIOTIC-SENSITIVITY AND RESISTANCE DURING AN OUTBREAK OF MENINGOCOCCAL INFECTION IN JOS, NIGERIA

Authors
Citation
Ia. Angyo et Es. Okpeh, CHANGING PATTERNS OF ANTIBIOTIC-SENSITIVITY AND RESISTANCE DURING AN OUTBREAK OF MENINGOCOCCAL INFECTION IN JOS, NIGERIA, Journal of tropical pediatrics, 44(5), 1998, pp. 263-265
Citations number
13
Categorie Soggetti
Tropical Medicine",Pediatrics
ISSN journal
01426338
Volume
44
Issue
5
Year of publication
1998
Pages
263 - 265
Database
ISI
SICI code
0142-6338(1998)44:5<263:CPOAAR>2.0.ZU;2-A
Abstract
Isolates of Neisseria meningitidis from blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 87 children admitted to the emergency paediatric unit (EPU) a t the Jos University Teaching Hospital (JUTH) during an outbreak of me ningococcal infection (between February and April 1996) were tested ag ainst the commonly used antibiotics in an attempt to determine the sen sitivity and resistance pattern, There were 11 (15.1 per cent) positiv e for N, meningitidis out of 73 blood cultures and 61 (70 per cent) po sitive out of 87 CSF cultures, Seventy-seven and thirty eight per cent respectively of the CSF isolates were resistant to benzylpenicillin a nd ampicillin, Sensitivity to chloramphenicol and erythromycin was 97 and 95 per cent, respectively. Out of the 11 positive blood cultures, 82 and 27 per cent were resistant to benzylpenicillin and ampicillin, respectively, while all the isolates (100 per cent) were sensitive to chloramphenicol and erythromycin, It is concluded that in view of the high level of resistance of the meningococci to benzylpenicillin in ou r environment, this drug should no longer be the drug of choice for th e empirical and initial treatment of meningococcal infection. We recom mend that chloramphenicol be the drug of choice for the empirical and initial treatment of meningococcal infection in our environment.