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Title: Predominance of the multiresistant 23F international clone of Streptococcus pneumoniae among isolates from Mexico. Author: Echániz-Aviles G, Velázquez-Meza ME, Carnalla-Barajas MN, Soto-Noguerón A, Di Fabio JL, Solórzano-Santos F, Jiménez-Tapia Y, Tomasz A. Journal: Microb Drug Resist; 1998; 4(3):241-6. PubMed ID: 9818976. Abstract: During a surveillance study to determine the relative prevalence of capsular types of Streptococcus pneumoniae and antimicrobial susceptibility of invasive isolates in children <5 years old in Mexico City, 220 isolates were collected. The serotype 23F was the most common found, followed by types 6A + B, 14, 19F, and 19A. Diminished susceptibility to penicillin was detected in 106 isolates (48.2%), and high penicillin resistance was found in 49 strains (22.2%), 31 belonging to type 23F. Resistance was also observed to erythromycin (13.1%), to chloramphenicol (43.1%), and to cefotaxime (10.9%). No strains were resistant to ofloxacin or vancomycin. Forty-four of the highly penicillin resistant isolates (penicillin MIC > or =2.0 microg/ml) were examined with molecular fingerprinting techniques; 29 (65.9%) of these isolates (all except two strains) were serotype 23F and shared subtype variants of PFGE type A characteristic of the internationally spread Spanish/USA clone of S. pneumoniae. These strains were also resistant to trimethoprim/sulfametoxasole (TMP/SMX), chloramphenicol, and tetracycline, and most of them were susceptible to erythromycin. Another 6 of the highly penicillin-resistant strains (serogroups 9 and 14) showed PFGE fingerprints and antimicrobial susceptibility pattern characteristic of a second internationally spread clone (French/Spanish clone) and carried resistance to penicillin and TMP/SMX. The rest of the 9 penicillin-resistant isolates were represented by 7 distinct additional PFGE types. The findings suggest that almost 80% of all highly penicillin resistant strains may have been "imported" into Mexico.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]