2014
DOI: 10.17795/iji-19229
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Prevalence and Antimicrobial Resistance of Campylobacter jejuni

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Cited by 11 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
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“…In our study, resistance tonalidixic acid was 3 (%33.3, which is similar to Ibrahim et al (24) report (23%) and two different studies from Thailand (77% (25) and 84% (26)), whereas resistance to erythromycin was 77.7% whichconflicts with Salehi et al (0%) (14) and Ibrahim and Wardak (0%) (24,27) reports, but is similar to Nonga and Muhairwa reports (28) which showed that 20% -50% of isolates were resistant to erythromycin and gentamicin. The resistance rate of our isolates to tetracycline was 77.7% that conflicts with the resistance rate reported in Poland (13.7%), but is similar to the results of Alberta in Canada (50%) and Spain (72%) (20,29).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
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“…In our study, resistance tonalidixic acid was 3 (%33.3, which is similar to Ibrahim et al (24) report (23%) and two different studies from Thailand (77% (25) and 84% (26)), whereas resistance to erythromycin was 77.7% whichconflicts with Salehi et al (0%) (14) and Ibrahim and Wardak (0%) (24,27) reports, but is similar to Nonga and Muhairwa reports (28) which showed that 20% -50% of isolates were resistant to erythromycin and gentamicin. The resistance rate of our isolates to tetracycline was 77.7% that conflicts with the resistance rate reported in Poland (13.7%), but is similar to the results of Alberta in Canada (50%) and Spain (72%) (20,29).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…in children less than 10 years old was 7.5%, which is similar to other studies in different parts of Iran: Zahedan, 11.6% (14); Shiraz, 9.8% (15); Tehran, 8% (16); Semnan, 9.8% (17). Wasfy (18) reported the prevalence of Campylobacter from acute enteric infections as (17%) in Egypt.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…In Germany, Campylobacter incidence peaks both in rural as well as urban areas in the summer (Schielke et al, 2014). In another study, the prevalence of C. jejuni varies in different part of Iran: Tehran, 8% (23); Semnan, 9.8% (24) and Shiraz, 9.8% because of different reasons such as level of hygiene, nutrition, weather and multi-cultural population in this city (Salehi et al, 2014). These data show similarity to other studies in other developing countries such as China, Bangladesh, Thailand, Egypt, Jordan, Nigeria (Coker et al, 2002) and Pakistan (Butzler and Skirrow, 1979) in which C. jejuni has been a common enteropathogen.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The characteristics of the 34 included studies are summarized in Tables 1 – 3 . The main data was extracted from 3 studies from Ahvaz [ 11 13 ], 2 studies from Hamadan [ 14 , 15 ], 4 studies from Isfahan [ 16 19 ], 1 study from Kerman [ 20 ], 1 study from Kurdistan [ 21 ], 2 studies from Mashhad [ 22 , 23 ], 1 study from Mazandaran and Golestan [ 24 ], 1 study from Rafsanjan [ 25 ], 5 studies from Shahrekord [ 13 , 18 , 26 – 28 ], 2 studies from Semnan [ 29 , 30 ], 4 studies from Shiraz [ 31 – 34 ], 8 studies from Tehran [ 35 – 42 ], 2 studies from Tonekabon [ 34 , 43 ], 1 study from Yazd [ 19 ], and 1 study from Zahedan [ 44 ]. Disk diffusion, E -test, and agar dilution were the most common methods used to evaluate antibiotic-resistant Campylobacter species in Iran (Tables 1 – 3 ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%