2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.resmic.2007.01.004
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Genetic diversity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates at the Military Medical Academy in Ankara, Turkey

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Cited by 7 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…In this study, spoligotyping of the 95 drug-resistant M. tuberculosis clinical isolates resulted in a very high clustering rate (79%). This clustering rate was similar to the results of the previous studies used spoligotyping (77%, 76%, 85%) in Turkey [8], [13], [14]. These rates are closer to the rates reported in Harare, Zimbabwe (84.1%) and in Finland (90%), but much higher than the rates of clustered drug-resistance cases observed in studies performed in Sweden (23.6%) and India (43.5%) [9], [17], [18], [29].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
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“…In this study, spoligotyping of the 95 drug-resistant M. tuberculosis clinical isolates resulted in a very high clustering rate (79%). This clustering rate was similar to the results of the previous studies used spoligotyping (77%, 76%, 85%) in Turkey [8], [13], [14]. These rates are closer to the rates reported in Harare, Zimbabwe (84.1%) and in Finland (90%), but much higher than the rates of clustered drug-resistance cases observed in studies performed in Sweden (23.6%) and India (43.5%) [9], [17], [18], [29].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Two of these studies showed that LAM7-TUR lineage corresponded to the most frequent spoligotype pattern SIT41 (21% and 22.5%, respectively) in the respective study populations [8], [16]; which allowed the description of a new phylogeographically-specific clone of M. tuberculosis , designated LAM7-TUR [16]. In another study from Ankara performed on 114 isolates, the frequency of this spoligotype was 7.9% and it was the 2 nd most prevalent spoligotype pattern [14]. A retrospective analysis of a paper on 374 isolates from Turkey published in 2005, i.e., a year before the designation LAM7-TUR was officially published, showed that as high as 14.4% of M. tuberculosis isolates belonged to LAM7-TUR which stood as the 2 nd most common spoligotype [13].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…The results of spoligotyping performed by Durmaz et al (8) for drug-resistant strains obtained from different areas of our country showed that SIT41, with a rate of 23%, is the most frequent genotype. In the spoligotyping studies carried by Kisa et al (15) in Ankara (Capital city, Central Anatolia) and by Aktaş et al (13) in Zonguldak (Northern Turkey) SIT53 was reported to be the most frequent genotype (32% and 22%, respectively), followed by SIT41. However, in both studies, besides strains resistant to drugs, sensitive strains were also included.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In spoligotyping studies carried out in our country, the clustering rate ranges between 67-85% (6,8,(13)(14)(15)(16). This rate is unrealistically high.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%