Inducible β-Lactam Resistance in Aeromonas hydrophila : Therapeutic Challenge for Antimicrobial Therapy
Open Access
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Clinical Microbiology
- Vol. 36 (11) , 3188-3192
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jcm.36.11.3188-3192.1998
Abstract
Despite the abundant amount of knowledge about inducible chromosomally mediated β-lactamases among Aeromonasspecies, extended-spectrum β-lactam-resistant A. hydrophila strains selected in clinical practice were rarely reported. In the present study, two strains of A. hydrophila, A136 and A139, with markedly different susceptibilities to extended-spectrum cephalosporins were isolated from blood and the tip segment of an arterial catheter of a burn patient. Another strain (A136m) was selected in vitro by culturing A136 in a subinhibitory concentration of cefotaxime, the β-lactam agent administered for the treatment of Aeromonas bacteremia in this patient. Typing studies by arbitrarily primed PCR and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis indicated a clonal relationship among strains A136, A136m, and A139. These strains were identified to be of DNA hybridization group 1. Wild-type strain A136 was resistant only to ampicillin and cephamycins, but A136m and A139 were highly resistant to the expanded- and broad-spectrum cephalosporins. The presence of increased β-lactamase activity in A139 suggests that A139 is a derepressed mutant which overexpresses β-lactamases. These results call attention to the use of β-lactam agents for the treatment of invasive Aeromonas infections.Keywords
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