Article Type
Article
Abstract
Stool samples were collected from 100 children patient aged between 3 days to 11 years who suffered from diarrhoea to isolate diarrheal causative bacteria. Fifty-one isolates were isolated and identified by cultural, microscopical, biochemical tests, and Vitek 2 system. The isolates were distributed as: 46 isolates belonged to Escherichia coli, 4 isolates belonged to Shigella sonnei, and one isolate belonged to Providencia alcalifaciens. All isolates were tested for antibiotic susceptibility to 10 different antibiotics and autoaggregation ability. All isolates were revealed resistant to Metronidazole while they were sensitive to Imipenem except one isolate of E. coli showed resistance to it. In the case of autoaggregation ability, all isolates showed their ability to auto aggregate at 24h, while some of them have the auto aggregation ability at 4h and 9h. The highest auto aggregation percentage at 4h was recorded 86% for E. coli among S. sonnei and P. alcalifaciens isolates which gave percentage rates (57.14 and 33) % respectively. The current study aimed at the isolation, and identification of diarrheal causative bacteria, antibiotic susceptibility, and detection of auto-aggregation ability of diarrheal causative bacteria.
Keywords
Diarrhoea, Diarrheal causative bacteria, Auto aggregation, Antibiotic susceptibility
Recommended Citation
Hameed, Shahad Rashad
(2025)
"Autoaggregation ability of diarrheal causative bacteria isolated from Iraqi children,"
Muthanna Medical Journal: Vol. 9:
Iss.
2, Article 11.
Available at:
https://muthmj.researchcommons.org/journal/vol9/iss2/11
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.