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Original Article
15 (
1
); 27-34
doi:
10.56018/2023065

Microbial Profile of Neonatal Septicemia and Antibiotic Susceptibility Pattern of the Isolates at A Tertiary Care Hospital, Western-India

Assistant Professor, Department of Microbiology, GMERS Medical College and Hospital, Sola, Ahmedabad
Associate Professor, Department of Microbiology, Smt. NHL Municipal Medical College, Ahmedabad
Associate Professor, Department of Microbiology, B.J. Medical College and Civil Hospital, Ahmedabad
Professor, Department of Microbiology, M. K. Shah Medical College & Research Center, Ahmedabad
Tutor, Department of Microbiology, B.J. Medical College and Civil Hospital, Ahmedabad

*Corresponding author:Dr.Dharmishtha Tada Email: nidhs777@gmail.com

Licence
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-Share Alike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, transform, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as the author is credited and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.

Abstract

Background:

The emergence of multidrug-resistant microbial agents in hospitals is a strenuous task for clinicians to treat neonatal septicemia. It is one of the leading causes of mortality and morbidity in developing countries among neonates.

Aims:

To study the microbial profile of agents causing neonatal septicemia, their susceptibility pattern, risk factors, and review the antibiotic prophylaxis policy to limit the injudicious use of antimicrobial agents. Material &Methods: The present study included 2550 neonates less than 28 days with clinical manifestation of septicemia from neonatal intensive care unit at the Tertiary care teaching center in western India from December 2017 to May 2019. Aseptically collected blood inoculated into BacT/ALERT blood culture bottle. Further isolation, identification, susceptibility testing was done from the positive signal bottle and interpreted susceptibility according to the latest CLSI guidelines.

Result:

Microbiologically proven neonatal septicemia detected in 675(26.47%) patients. The predominant organisms isolated were Klebsiellapneumoniae 170 (25%). Pan-antibiotic resistance noted among 8(1.83%) gram-negative rods. Conclusion: Overall, increased emergence of resistance to the cephalosporin, penicillin group, and azole group of antibiotics. In the present study, fluoroquinolones, tetracycline and voriconazole are the better preferred.

Keywords

Neonatal septicemia
injudicious use of antimicrobial agents
review the antibiotic prophylaxis policy

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