MICROBIOLOGICAL SCREENING OF OTORRHOEA FROM PEOPLE COMING TO HOSPITAL IN MAHAJANGA

dc.creatorRAKOTOMALALA, Rivo
dc.creatorRANDRIANANDRAINA, Patrick
dc.creatorRAMAVOSON, Tsiriniaina
dc.creatorRAMISARIMANANA, Fiacre
dc.creatorRAZAFINDRAKOTO, Ainamalala Catherine
dc.creatorRABENANDRIANINA, Tahirimalala
dc.creatorRAJAONATAHIANA, Davidra
dc.creatorTIANDAZA, Odilon
dc.creatorRAKOTO ALSON, Olivat
dc.creatorRASAMINDRAKOTROKA, Andry
dc.creatorRazanakolona, Rasoamialy
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-10T19:35:43Z
dc.date.available2026-01-10T19:35:43Z
dc.date.issued2020-02-12
dc.descriptionIn whole, 56 patients were included. Amidst identified microorganisms were fungus (4,7%) and bacteria (95,3%) to which Gram negative bacilli represented 72,1% (n=44), Gram positive cocci 6,4% (n=10), Gram positive bacilli 8,2% (n=5) and Gram negative cocci 3,3% (n=2). Among these bacterias, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Proteus sp were predominant, with respectively 41% (n=25), 23% (n=14). However, three cases of S. aureus reported, six with negative coagulase Staphylococcus, one with Escherichia coli, one with Klebsiella sp, one with Haemophilus sp, two cases with Neisseria sp and four cases with Corynebacterium sp. Two types of cultures were noticed, one of them monomorphic (91,1%, n=51) and the other polymorphic (8,9%, n=5) to which 3 associations of P. aeruginosa-Proteus sp, 1 association of P. aeruginosa- coagulase negative Staphylococcus and 1 association of P. aeruginosa- E. coli. No resistance to ciprofloxacin was observed with Pseudomonas, Neisseria sp, Haemophilus, and enterobacteria except for E. coli. No resistance to rifampicin was observed with S. aureus. However, the sensitivity of S. aureus to ciprofloxacin decreased (one bacterium out of three). The use of rifampicin or fluoroquinolones should be based on the type of ear infections,en-US
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.identifierhttps://sumathipublications.com/index.php/ijcbr/article/view/328
dc.identifier10.31878/ijcbr.2019.61.07
dc.identifier.urihttps://repos.sumathipublications.com:8000/handle/123456789/335
dc.languageeng
dc.publisherSumathi Publicationsen-US
dc.relationhttps://sumathipublications.com/index.php/ijcbr/article/view/328/357
dc.relation.ispartofInternational Journal of Clinical and Biomedical Researchen-US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesVolume 6, Issue 1en-US
dc.rightsCopyright (c) 2020 Rivo RAKOTOMALALA, Patrick ANDRIANANDRAINA, Tsiriniaina RAMAVOSON, Fiacre RAMISARIMANANA, Ainamalala Catherine RAZAFINDRAKOTO, Tahirimalala RABENANDRIANINA, Davidra RAJAONATAHIANA, Odilon TIANDAZA, Olivat RAKOTO ALSON, Andry RASAMINDRAKOTROKAen-US
dc.sourceInternational Journal of Clinical and Biomedical Research; Volume 6, Issue 1; Jan 2020.; 25-28en-US
dc.source2395-0471
dc.source2521-0394
dc.subjectotorrhoea, otitis, bacteria, rifampicin ciprofloxacineen-US
dc.titleMICROBIOLOGICAL SCREENING OF OTORRHOEA FROM PEOPLE COMING TO HOSPITAL IN MAHAJANGAen-US
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

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