Oluyege J O, Dada A C, Odeyemi A T
Department of Microbiology, University of Ado-Ekiti, Nigeria.
Water Sci Technol. 2009;59(10):1929-36. doi: 10.2166/wst.2009.219.
In most rural and urban settlements, particularly in Nigeria, wells, spring, streams or rivers and lakes serves as major sources of water supply for drinking and other domestic purposes. Unfortunately, many of the available water sources are not potable without some form of treatment which is seldom available in most settings. The use of untreated surface water sources for drinking and for domestic purposes remains a major threat to public health as these could serve as reservoirs the for transfer of antibiotic resistant pathogens. The incidence of resistant bacteria isolated from surface and underground water in six rural settlements in Ekiti State Nigeria was thus investigated. Gram-negative bacteria were isolated from wells, streams and boreholes in six rural settlements in Ekiti State Nigeria between January and April, 2006 and the prevalence of organisms exhibiting multiple antibiotic resistance to tetracycline, amoxicillin, cotrimoxazole, nitofurantoin, gentamicin, nalidixic acid and ofloxacin was observed. Gram-negative bacterial isolates comprised Escherichia coli (22.7%), Enterobacter aerogenes (2.5%), Salmonella spp. (13.3%), Shigella spp. (19.3%), Proteus spp. (18.5%), Klebsiella spp. (19.3%) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (4.2%). Over 10% of the bacteria were resistant to four or more antibiotic. Antibiotic resistance was highest in members of the genera Enterobacter, Pseudomonas, and Proteus. Given the prevalence of appalling sanitary facilities and inappropriate public antibiotic use, the possibility of antibiotic resistance selection, faecal dissemination and subsequent contamination of local water sources available for rural residents of the developing world is highlighted. The implication for clinical practice of infections caused by antibiotic resistant strains especially among immunodeficient individuals is also discussed.
在大多数农村和城市住区,尤其是在尼日利亚,水井、泉水、溪流、河流及湖泊是饮用水和其他家庭用水的主要供应源。不幸的是,许多现有的水源未经某种形式的处理就不适合饮用,而在大多数情况下这种处理很少具备。将未经处理的地表水用于饮用和家庭用途仍然是对公众健康的一大威胁,因为这些地表水可能成为抗生素耐药病原体传播的蓄水池。因此,对尼日利亚埃基提州六个农村住区地表水和地下水中分离出的耐药细菌的发生率进行了调查。2006年1月至4月期间,从尼日利亚埃基提州六个农村住区的水井、溪流和钻孔中分离出革兰氏阴性菌,并观察了对四环素、阿莫西林、复方新诺明、呋喃妥因、庆大霉素、萘啶酸和氧氟沙星表现出多重抗生素耐药性的微生物的流行情况。革兰氏阴性菌分离株包括大肠杆菌(22.7%)、产气肠杆菌(2.5%)、沙门氏菌属(13.3%)、志贺氏菌属(19.3%)、变形杆菌属(18.5%)、克雷伯氏菌属(19.3%)和铜绿假单胞菌(4.2%)。超过10%的细菌对四种或更多种抗生素耐药。抗生素耐药性在肠杆菌属、假单胞菌属和变形杆菌属成员中最高。鉴于恶劣卫生设施的普遍存在和公共抗生素的不当使用,凸显了发展中世界农村居民当地可用水源存在抗生素耐药性选择、粪便传播及后续污染的可能性。还讨论了抗生素耐药菌株引起的感染对临床实践的影响,尤其是在免疫缺陷个体中。