南非公共医疗机构糖尿病足溃疡的抗菌药敏感性模式。

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Samj South African Medical Journal Pub Date : 2024-05-31 DOI:10.7196/SAMJ.2024.v114i6.1131
M J Turner, S Leigh-de Rapper, T P Mokoena, S Van Vuuren
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:糖尿病足综合征的定义是存在与神经病变、外周动脉疾病和感染相关的糖尿病足溃疡(DFU)。虽然使用抗菌药物治疗糖尿病足感染仍是主流,但由于存在耐多药多微生物感染,抗菌药物的选择仍是个问题。在南非的公共医疗保健部门,DFU 的治疗以《标准治疗指南》(STGs)和《基本药物清单》为基础。这些指南是以循证医学为基础制定的,依据的是全球药敏模式而非本地药敏数据,因此可能无法提供最合适的治疗方案:目的:确定从豪滕省部分公立医院就诊的患者中分离出的 DFU 的抗菌药敏感性模式,以确定治疗这些感染的临床有效治疗方案:方法:采用莱文法从 51 例 DFU 采集拭子样本。方法:采用莱文法从 51 个 DFU 采集拭子样本,将每个拭子样本涂抹在血琼脂平板上,然后分离出单个病原体。使用抑菌区测量法确定所有分离病原体的抗菌药敏感性模式。根据病原体的大体形态特征和药敏模式对病原体进行分组,然后确定每组中具有代表性的分离株:研究共纳入了 45 名患者的 51 份 DFU 溃疡拭子样本。从拭子样本中共分离出 445 种病原体。最有效的抗菌药物是庆大霉素,其次是环丙沙星。阿莫西林/克拉维酸是 STGs 规定的一线治疗药物,但对许多分离出的病原体无效。最常见的病原体是变形杆菌、粪肠球菌和铜绿假单胞菌:这些发现表明,迫切需要重新评估 STGs,并根据当地流行病学数据制定治疗计划。这项研究提供了有关 DFU 感染常见致病病原体的宝贵数据,以及这些病原体的耐药性模式,为今后制定 DFU 治疗计划提供了依据。
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The antimicrobial susceptibility patterns of diabetic foot ulcers in the South African public healthcare sector.

Background: Diabetic foot syndrome is defined as the presence of a diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) associated with neuropathy, peripheral artery disease and infection. While the use of antimicrobials in the treatment of DFU infection remains a mainstay, the choice of antimicrobial remains problematic owing to the presence of multidrug-resistant polymicrobial infections. In the South African public healthcare sector, the treatment of DFUs is based on the Standard Treatment Guidelines (STGs) and the Essential Drug List. These guidelines are developed using evidence-based medicine and are based on global susceptibility patterns rather than local susceptibility data, and may not provide the most appropriate treatment options.

Objectives: To determine the antimicrobial susceptibility patterns of DFUs isolated from patients visiting selected Gauteng provincial public hospitals in order to determine a clinically effective treatment protocol for the management of these infections.

Methods: Sample swabs were taken from 51 DFUs using the Levine method. Each sample swab was spread onto blood agar plates, and thereafter individual pathogens were isolated. The antimicrobial susceptibility patterns of all isolated pathogens were determined using zone of inhibition measurements. Pathogens were grouped according to macromorphological characteristics as well as susceptibility patterns, and a representative isolate from each group was then identified.

Results: A total of 51 DFU ulcer swabs from 45 patients were included in the study. From the sample swabs, a total of 445 pathogens were isolated. The most effective antimicrobial was found to be gentamicin, followed by ciprofloxacin. Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, the first-line treatment according to the STGs, was found to be ineffective for many of the isolated pathogens. The most commonly isolated pathogens were Proteus mirabilis, Enterococcus faecalis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

Conclusion: These findings demonstrate the urgent need to reassess the STGs and base treatment plans on local epidemiological data. This study provides valuable data on common causative pathogens in DFU infections, as well as the resistance patterns of these pathogens, forming a baseline on which to base future DFU treatment plans.

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来源期刊
Samj South African Medical Journal
Samj South African Medical Journal 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
4.50%
发文量
175
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The SAMJ is a monthly peer reviewed, internationally indexed, general medical journal. It carries The SAMJ is a monthly, peer-reviewed, internationally indexed, general medical journal publishing leading research impacting clinical care in Africa. The Journal is not limited to articles that have ‘general medical content’, but is intending to capture the spectrum of medical and health sciences, grouped by relevance to the country’s burden of disease. This will include research in the social sciences and economics that is relevant to the medical issues around our burden of disease The journal carries research articles and letters, editorials, clinical practice and other medical articles and personal opinion, South African health-related news, obituaries, general correspondence, and classified advertisements (refer to the section policies for further information).
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