Antibiotic resistant pathogens versus human impacts: A study from three eco-regions of the Chennai coast, southern India
2012
Vignesh, Sivanandham | Muthukumar, Krishnan | Arthur James, Rathinam
We assessed the occurrence of pollution indicators and antibiotic resistant bacterial isolates from water and sediment samples of three different eco-regions of the Chennai coast between March – May of 2010. Total of 960 bacterial strains belonging to four genera were isolated which show the highest frequencies of resistance to vancomycin (53.6%) and penicillin (52.6%) (except Enterococcus sp., which is highly resistant to erythromycin) and lowest frequencies of resistance to chloramphenicol (3.43%), ciprofloxacin (3.95%), gentamicin (4.68%), and tetracycline (6.97%). The E. coli, Vibrio sp., Salmonella sp. and Enterococcus sp. show high frequency of resistance to 2–5 antibacterials of 60.4%, 45.83%, 69.16% and 46.6%, respectively. High pollution indices (PI – 6.66–14.06) and antibiotic resistance indices (ARI – 0.29–0.343) indicate that the coastal environment is highly exposed to antibiotic sources that suggesting to avoid direct contact.
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