Isolation and identification of respiratory pathogen from sputum sample assessment antibiotics resistance: single centered cross sectional study

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Date
2024-11Publisher
BRAC UniversityAuthor
Labony, Adhara ZamanMetadata
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Respiratory tract infections are general health threats that are magnified by increased cases of
antibiotic resistance. The purpose of this study was to isolate respiratory pathogens from
sputum samples to determine their resistance profile in a single center cross sectional study. In
all, 909 samples (indoor and outdoor patients) were analyzed by standard microbiological
techniques and the AST was performed. Among 909 samples,413 growth were found where
195(47.32%) were Klebsiella pneumonia and 183(44.31%) were Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
These were the two most common causative organisms in the study. Furthermore, we also
found about 7.58% of cases (31) to be Streptococcus, 0.24% of cases (2) to be Escherichia coli
, 0.24% of cases(1) to be Staphylococcus and the same for antibacterial. A thorough analysis
was performed on data collected from June of 2024 to August of the same year. The present
study emphasizes the importance of periodic screening of resistance profiles ensuring that
health professionals adhere to appropriate antibiotics prescription to curb the resistant strains.
For example, Klebsiella Sensitivity of amikacin was 71.79% but its resistance of piperacillin
was 29.23%. Similarly, Pseudomonas resistance trend for Piperacillin was also similar to
Klebsiella which was 29.23% and for Meropenem the resistance showed 13.11% which was
very alarming. Again, Pseudomonas showed strong effectiveness for amikacin which was
around 71.79% sensitive. Thus, according to our findings, the most effective antibiotics are
Amikacin, Gentamicin and Meropenem which showed high efficacy for our researched
organisms. In contrast, the least effective antibiotics are Clindamycin, Cefixime, Ceftriaxone
and Azithromycin which faced widespread resistance, inhibiting their utility in severe
infections. This work adds important baseline information to aid health professionals in clinical
management and infection prevention planning.