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Journal of Clinical Microbiology
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Research Article

Clinical and bacteriological study of nosocomial infections due to Enterobacter aerogenes resistant to imipenem.

C de Champs, C Henquell, D Guelon, D Sirot, N Gazuy, J Sirot
C de Champs
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C Henquell
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D Guelon
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D Sirot
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N Gazuy
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J Sirot
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ABSTRACT

Enterobacter aerogenes strains resistant to imipenem were isolated in 10 patients, 7 of whom had received imipenem-cilastatin. The strains were differentiated by biotype, antibiotype, and plasmid content. All of the strains overproduced a chromosomal cephalosporinase and lost a major outer membrane protein with a size of about 40 kDa. In 5 of the 10 patients, E. aerogenes strains resistant to extended-spectrum cephalosporin were isolated during the same stay. In three patients, the similarity between the imipenem-susceptible and -resistant strains suggests the occurrence of mutation and reversion in vivo. The combination imipenem-cilastatin has been critically important for use with multiresistant strains of Enterobacter spp., but its use increases the risk of selection of imipenem-resistant strains.

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Clinical and bacteriological study of nosocomial infections due to Enterobacter aerogenes resistant to imipenem.
C de Champs, C Henquell, D Guelon, D Sirot, N Gazuy, J Sirot
Journal of Clinical Microbiology Jan 1993, 31 (1) 123-127; DOI:

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Clinical and bacteriological study of nosocomial infections due to Enterobacter aerogenes resistant to imipenem.
C de Champs, C Henquell, D Guelon, D Sirot, N Gazuy, J Sirot
Journal of Clinical Microbiology Jan 1993, 31 (1) 123-127; DOI:
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