Publication:
Burden of enteric fever and antibiotic sensitivity in Nepalese Children Prior to Typhoid Vaccine in National Immunization Program

creativeworkseries.issn1999-6217
dc.contributor.authorChapagain, Ram Hari
dc.contributor.authorAdhikari, Santosh
dc.contributor.authorBhattarai, Tribhuwan
dc.contributor.authorBasaula, Yubanidhi
dc.contributor.authorBhattarai, Srijana
dc.date.accessioned2025-07-28T09:50:44Z
dc.date.available2025-07-28T09:50:44Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.descriptionRam Hari Chapagain Department of Pediatric Medicine, Kanti Children’s Hospital, Kathmandu, Nepal santosh Adhikari Department of Pediatric Medicine, Kanti Children’s Hospital, Kathmandu, Nepal https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4345-6131 Tribhuwan Bhattarai National Academy of Medical Sciences (NAMS), Kathmandu, Nepal Yubanidhi Basaula Department of Pediatric Medicine, Kanti Children’s Hospital, Kathmandu, Nepal Srijana Bhattarai Paropakar Maternity and Women’s Hospital, Kathmandu, Nepal
dc.description.abstractAbstract Background: Enteric fever is a major public health problem in developing and under developed countries. Case fatality rate without treatment is 10-30% and with appropriate treatment is only 1-4%. Gold standard for diagnosis is isolation of Salmonella enterica from blood or bone marrow. Antibiotics resistance is skyrocketing with emergence of multidrug resistance S. typhi and extensively drug resistant S. typhi. Methods: The blood culture done in Kanti children hospital in last six years were taken from the data base and the culture positive cases were taken from which the salmonella species positive cases along with the drug sensitivity pattern were used in our study. Results: The culture positivity rate was 2.8% and 7.6% (n=136) among the culture positive cases were Salmonella species. Salmonella typhi (121; 88.9%) was the most frequently isolated species, followed by Salmonella paratyphi A (13; 9.5%) and Salmonella paratyphi B (2;1.4%). Children with age 5-10 years was the most affected age group for infection with Salmonella, 50.0% (n=68). Nalidixic acid is resistant in 89.9% Salmonella typhi; followed by ciprofloxacin (31.8%), ofloxacin (18.2%), ampicillin (9.6%), azithromycin (8.4%), chloramphenicol (8.2%), cotrimoxazole (5.4%), cefixime (4%), ceftriaxone (2.5%) and cefotaxime (0.0%). Cefixime, ceftriaxone, cefotaxime are 100% sensitive to Salmonella paratyphi, followed by cotrimoxazole (92.9%), ofloxacin (81.8%), chloramphenicol (75%), azithromycin (66.7%), ampicillin (60%), ciprofloxacin (50%) and Nalidixic acid (23.1%). Conclusions: Salmonella species culture isolatation are declining every year. Fluoroquinolones have more resistance than first line drugs of typhoid, azithromycin resistance is rising but 3rd generation cephalosporins are sensitive to Salmonella species. Keywords: Drug sensitivity; enteric fever; salmonella paratyphi; salmonella typhi; typhoid vaccine
dc.identifierhttps://doi.org/10.33314/jnhrc.v21i02.4728
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14572/858
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherNepal Health Research Council
dc.titleBurden of enteric fever and antibiotic sensitivity in Nepalese Children Prior to Typhoid Vaccine in National Immunization Program
dc.typeArticle
dspace.entity.typePublication
local.article.typeOriginal Article
oaire.citation.endPage303
oaire.citation.startPage297
relation.isJournalIssueOfPublication3d469339-0e4d-4c21-a203-895a72cdfddc
relation.isJournalIssueOfPublication.latestForDiscovery3d469339-0e4d-4c21-a203-895a72cdfddc
relation.isJournalOfPublication40bd2739-8b19-447c-be60-723a1bdd1dcd

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