Klebsiella-induced infections in domestic species: a case-series study in 697 animals (1997-2019).
Márcio Garcia RibeiroAmanda Bonalume Cordeiro de MoraisAna Carolina AlvesCarmen Alicia Daza BolañosCarolina Lechinski de PaulaFábio Vinicius Ramos PortilhoGeraldo de Nardi JúniorGustavo Henrique Batista LaraLorrayne de Souza Araújo MartinsLucieny Sierra MoraesRafaela Mastrangelo RissetiSimony Trevizan GuerraThaís Spessotto BelloAmanda Keller SiqueiraAmanda Bezerra BertoliniCarolina Aparecida RodriguesNatália Rodrigues PaschoalBeatriz Oliveira de AlmeidaFernando José Paganini ListoniLuísa Fernanda García SánchezAntonio Carlos PaesPublished in: Brazilian journal of microbiology : [publication of the Brazilian Society for Microbiology] (2022)
Klebsiella species, particularly K. pneumoniae, are well-known opportunistic enterobacteria related to complexity of clinical infections in humans and animals, commonly refractory to conventional therapy. The domestic animals may represent a source of the pathogenic and multidrug-resistant Klebsiella species to humans. Nevertheless, most studies involving Klebsiella-induced infections in domestic animals are restricted to case reports or outbreaks. We retrospectively investigated selected epidemiological data, clinical aspects, and in vitro susceptibility pattern of 697 non-repetitive Klebsiella infections in livestock and companion species (1997-2019). The isolates were obtained from different clinical disorders from dogs (n = 393), cattle (n = 149), horses (n = 98), cats (n = 27), pigs (n = 22), sheep (n = 5), goats (n = 2), and buffalo (n = 1), except four isolates from subclinical bovine mastitis. Urinary (223/697 = 32%), enteric (117/697 = 16.8%), mammary (85/697 = 12.2%), reproductive (85/697 = 12.2%), and respiratory disorders (67/697 = 9.6%) were the most common clinical manifestations. Other miscellaneous clinical pictures (116/697 = 16.6%) included abscesses, otitis, hepatitis, conjunctivitis, pyodermitis, sepsis, and encephalitis. Norfloxacin (183/245 = 74.7%) and gentamicin (226/330 = 68.5%) were the most effective antimicrobials. High in vitro resistance of the isolates was seen to ampicillin (326/355 = 91.8%), amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (25/62 = 40.3%), and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (100/252 = 39.7), and multidrug resistance to ≥ 3 classes of antimicrobials was found in 20.4% (142/697) isolates. Wide variety of clinical manifestations of Klebsiella-induced infections was observed, with a predominance of urinary, enteric, mammary, reproductive, and respiratory tract disorders, reinforcing opportunistic behavior of agent. Poor in vitro efficacy was observed to some conventional antimicrobials and ~ 20% of isolates exhibited resistance pattern, reinforcing the need for proper use of drugs on therapy approaches in domestic animals to avoid multidrug-resistant bacteria, an emergent global concern.
Keyphrases
- multidrug resistant
- genetic diversity
- respiratory tract
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- drug induced
- intensive care unit
- drug resistant
- acute kidney injury
- stem cells
- oxidative stress
- gram negative
- case report
- cystic fibrosis
- endothelial cells
- mass spectrometry
- acinetobacter baumannii
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- klebsiella pneumoniae