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Journal ArticleDOI

Antibiotic susceptibility testing by a standardized single disk method.

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TLDR
Recommendations of the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards continue to be based on this publication; the “Kirby-Bauer” method is, among the many disk methods used in other countries, still the one that has been researched most thoroughly and updated continuously.
Abstract
In the words of the authors, the paper by A. W. Bauer et al., from the University of Washington in Seattle, on a standardized single-disk method for antibiotic susceptibility testing “. . . consolidate(s) and update(s) previous descriptions of the method and provide(s) a concise outline for its performance and interpretation.” Clinical microbiologists were relieved that finally a disk diffusion method had been standardized, could be used with ease, and provided reliable results as compared with minimum inhibitory concentration tests. The pivotal role of Hans Ericsson’s theoretical and practical studies (H. Ericsson and G. Svartz-Malmberg, Antibiot. Chemother. 6:41–74, 1959), as well as earlier reports by some of the authors of the publications cited, must be mentioned as a matter of fairness. Most of the recommendations given are still valid today even though some of the antimicrobial agents are obsolete, new ones have been added, some zone sizes had to be modified, and new media were designed for Haemophilus influenzae and Neisseria gonorrhoeae. Recommendations of the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards continue to be based on this publication; the “Kirby-Bauer” method is, among the many disk methods used in other countries, still the one that has been researched most thoroughly and updated continuously. ALEXANDER VON GRAEVENITZ

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Journal ArticleDOI

Antibacterial activity of plant extracts and phytochemicals on antibiotic-resistant bacteria

TL;DR: In this paper, the antimicrobial activity of plant extracts and phytochemicals was evaluated with antibiotic susceptible and resistant microorganisms, and the possible synergistic effects when associated with antibiotics were studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing: A Review of General Principles and Contemporary Practices

TL;DR: An important task of the clinical microbiology laboratory is the performance of antimicrobial susceptibility testing of significant bacterial isolates to detect possible drug resistance in common pathogens and to assure susceptibility to drugs of choice for particular infections.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antimicrobial and phytochemical studies on 45 Indian medicinal plants against multi-drug resistant human pathogens

TL;DR: Qualitative phytochemical tests, thin layer chromatography and TLC-bioautography of certain active extracts demonstrated the presence of common phytocompounds in the plant extracts including phenols, tannins and flavonoids as major active constituents.
Journal ArticleDOI

TOXIC-SHOCK SYNDROME NOT ASSOCIATED WITH MENSTRUATION: A Review of 54 cases

TL;DR: The clinical features of TSS not associated with menstruation and the characteristics of the S. aureus strains isolated from these patients were similar to those observed in TSS related to menstruation.