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Journal ArticleDOI

Epidemiology of antimicrobial resistance in enterococci of animal origin

TLDR
This study shows the presence of a significant reservoir of antibiotic-resistant enterococci among farm animals and resistance was more common on farms using antimicrobial agents.
Abstract
Objective: We evaluated the epidemiology of antimicrobial resistance in enterococci from animal farms and the potential relation of resistance to antimicrobial use. Methods: Enterococci from faecal samples from 18 beef cattle, 18 dairy cattle, 18 swine, 13 chicken, and eight turkey farms were prospectively evaluated over a 6 year period from 1998 to 2003. Results: We evaluated 1256 isolates of Enterococcus faecium and 656 isolates of Enterococcus faecalis. None was vancomycin resistant. Quinupristin/dalfopristin, gentamicin and ciprofloxacin resistance rates in E. faecium were 2%, 0% and 55% in beef cattle, 8%, 7% and 47% in dairy cattle, 21%, 1% and 47% in swine, 85%, 12% and 23% in chicken, and 52%, 13% and 24% in turkey isolates, respectively. For E. faecalis, gentamicin resistance rates were 0% in beef cattle, 24% in dairy cattle, 37% in swine, 32% in chicken, and 29% in turkey isolates, whereas 12%, 9%, 21%, 64% and none of isolates from beef, dairy, swine, chicken, and turkey farms, respectively, were resistant to ciprofloxacin. Quinupristin/dalfopristin resistance in E. faecium was more common on chicken and turkey farms using virginia-mycin (P< 0.0001 for both) compared with farms not using a streptogramin, gentamicin resistance was more common on dairy farms using gentamicin (P<0.0001) compared with farms not using this antibiotic, and ciprofloxacin resistance was more common on turkey and dairy farms using enrofloxacin compared with those with no enrofloxacin use (P = 0.02 and P = 0.04, respectively). For E. faecalis, gentamicin resistance was more frequently detected on dairy and swine farms using gentamicin (P< 0.0001 and P = 0.0052, respectively) and ciprofloxacin resistance was more common on beef farms using enrofloxacin (P<0.0001) compared with farms not using these antimicrobials. PFGE showed multiple strain types with some clones common between animals of the same animal species. Conclusions: This study shows the presence of a significant reservoir of antibiotic-resistant enterococci among farm animals. Resistance was more common on farms using antimicrobial agents.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Food Animals and Antimicrobials: Impacts on Human Health

TL;DR: The substantial and expanding volume of evidence reporting animal-to-human spread of resistant bacteria, including that arising from use of NTAs, supports eliminating NTA use in order to reduce the growing environmental load of resistance genes.
Journal ArticleDOI

In Vivo Transfer of the vanA Resistance Gene from an Enterococcus faecium Isolate of Animal Origin to an E. faecium Isolate of Human Origin in the Intestines of Human Volunteers

TL;DR: It is suggested that transient intestinal colonization by enterococci carrying mobile elements with resistance genes represents a risk for spread of resistance genes to other entersococci that are part of the human indigenous flora, which can be responsible for infections in certain groups of patients, e.g., immunocompromised patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Food Production Environment and the Development of Antimicrobial Resistance in Human Pathogens of Animal Origin

TL;DR: Concerted global efforts are necessary to minimize the use of antimicrobials in food animals in order to control the development of antibiotic resistance in these systems and their spread to humans via food and water.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antimicrobial Resistance in Enterococcus spp. of animal origin.

TL;DR: The diversity of enterococcal species and their distribution in the intestinal tract of animals and the epidemiology of multidrug-resistant enterococci of animal origin are analyzed, with special attention given to beta-lactams, glycopeptides, and linezolid.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antibiotic Residues in Chicken Meat: Global Prevalence, Threats, and Decontamination Strategies: A Review.

TL;DR: Training farmers to monitor withdrawal periods, banning the use of antibiotics as growth promoters, and adopting the veterinary feed directive of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration are important parameters to mitigate the emergence of antibiotic resistance in bacteria related to poultry production.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Interpreting chromosomal DNA restriction patterns produced by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis: criteria for bacterial strain typing.

TL;DR: This research presents a novel, scalable and scalable approach that allows for real-time assessment of the severity of the infection and its impact on patients’ health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identification of Enterococcus species isolated from human infections by a conventional test scheme.

TL;DR: Streptococci (206 cultures) previously identified as enterococci were retrieved from storage and reidentified by using tests designed to identify species of the genus Enterococcus by using DNA-DNA hybridizations to assure correct identification.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antibiotic resistance of faecal Escherichia coli in poultry, poultry farmers and poultry slaughterers

TL;DR: The results of this study strongly indicate that transmission of resistant clones and resistance plasmids of E. coli from poultry to humans commonly occurs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determinants of vancomycin resistance and mortality rates in enterococcal bacteremia. a prospective multicenter study.

TL;DR: A prospective, multicenter observational study of outcome in patients with enterococcal bacteremia to determine the clinical implications of antibiotic resistance in enterococci and the effect of antibiotic therapy on outcome was instituted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Use of antimicrobial growth promoters in food animals and Enterococcus faecium resistance to therapeutic antimicrobial drugs in Europe.

TL;DR: Accumulating evidence now indicates that the use of the glycopeptide avoparcin as a growth promoter has created in food animals a major reservoir of Enterococcus faecium, which contains the high level glycopesptide resistance determinant vanA, located on the Tn1546 transposon.
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