Multiple Antibiotic Resistances of Vibrio Isolates from Coastal and Brackish Water Areas

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Multiple Antibiotic Resistances of Vibrio Isolates from Coastal and Brackish Water Areas

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dc.contributor.author Sarita,G Bhat
dc.date.accessioned 2008-08-22T03:44:43Z
dc.date.available 2008-08-22T03:44:43Z
dc.date.issued 2005
dc.identifier.other American Journal of Biochemistry and Biotechnology I (4): 201-206, 2005,ISSN 1553-3468
dc.identifier.uri http://dyuthi.cusat.ac.in/purl/720
dc.description.abstract An experiment was designed to assess the occurrence of multiple antibiotic resistances in Vibrio sp from different (brackish and marine) environments. Water samples front nine marine landing sites and two coastal inland aquaculture farms were screened for the Vibrio spp and assessed their resistance to twenty-two different antibiotics, which arc commonly encountered in the aquatic ecosystem. Tissue samples (shrimp, mussel and sepia) were tested from the sampling site with highest antibiotic resistance. Of' the total 119 Vibrio isolates, 16. 8% were susceptible to all antibiotics. Of the resistant (83.19%) Vibrio strains, 30.3% were resistant against three antibiotics, 55.5% were resistant against 4-10 antibiotics, 14.14% were resistant against more than 10 antibiotics and 54% have shown multiple antibiotics resistance (MAR). Antibiotic resistance index was higher in Coastal 3, 6, Aqua farm 2 in isolates from water samples and all the tissues tested. Interestingly, incidence of antibiotic resistance in isolates from water samples was comparatively lower in aquaculture farms than that observed in coastal areas. Highest incidence of antibiotic resistance was evident against Amoxycillin, Ampicillin, Carbencillin and Cefuroxime followed by Rilanipicin and Streptomycin and lowest against Chloramphenicol, Tetracycline, Chlortetracycline, Furazolidone, Nalidixic acid, Gentamycin Sulphafurazole, Trimcthoprinr, Neomycin and Amikacin irrespective of the sampling sites. Results from various tissue samples collected from the sites of highest antibiotic resistance indicated that antibiotic resistance Vibrio spp collected from fish and tissue samples were higher than that of water samples. Overall results indicated that persistent use of antibiotics against diseases in human beings and other life forms may pollute the aquatic system and their impact on developing antibiotic resistant Vibrio sp may be a serious threat in addition to the use of antibiotics in aquaculture farms. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Science Publications en_US
dc.subject Multiple antibiotic resistance en_US
dc.subject Shrimp en_US
dc.subject Vibrio spp en_US
dc.subject Mussel en_US
dc.subject Sepia en_US
dc.title Multiple Antibiotic Resistances of Vibrio Isolates from Coastal and Brackish Water Areas en_US
dc.type Working Paper en_US


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