Abstract
We investigated the antimicrobial susceptibilities and molecular epidemiology of 200 strains of Salmonella enterica serotype typhimurium isolated from 1989 to 1996 in Hong Kong. Only 22% of strains were susceptible to all 19 antibiotics tested but all were susceptible to second- and third-generation cephalosporins. Up to 9% of strains were resistant to 0.12 mg/l concentrations of ciprofloxacin or ofloxacin but none were resistant to 1 or 2 mg/l concentrations of these 2 drugs, respectively. The isolates were grouped into 15 types by ribotyping with restriction endonuclease EcoRI and into 53 types by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of XbaI-restricted DNA fragments. When DNA fragments of the ribotypes and pulsotypes were pooled and analyzed 87 types resulted, 76 (87%) of which were of > 90% similarity and were grouped into 15 clusters. About 60% of the isolates belonged to 3 clusters, which probably represented 3 clones endemic in the community. The rest of the isolates were of a large variety of types or clusters. For epidemiological purposes analysis of pooled results from different molecular techniques would be more discriminative than results from individual techniques alone.