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Volume 4, Issue 2 (Suppl)
J Pigment Disord
ISSN: 2376-0427 JPD, an open access journal
World Dermatology Congress 2017
September 25-26, 2017
September 25-26, 2017 Dubai, UAE
17
th
World Dermatology Congress
Clinical prevalence, histopathological evaluation, antimicrobial susceptibility andmolecular genotyping
of staphylococci from canine pyoderma: The first prospective study of first-time cases in Iran
Javad Khoshnegah, Mehrnaz Rad, Ahmad Reza Movassaghi and Shaghayegh Rafatpanah
Ferdowsi University of Mashhad, Iran
T
he purpose of the present study was to investigate the prevalence of staphylococci isolation from dogs with first time
pyoderma and to describe antimicrobial susceptibility and enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus-based PCR
typing of clinical staphylococci species from dogs presenting at a university teaching hospital. The study animals were 61
clinical cases of dogs with first-time pyoderma. Swabs for bacterial culture were taken from pustule or papule without prior
disinfection. Isolates were identified on the basis of colony morphology, Gram-staining, pigment production and hemolysis. For
all Gram-positive, catalase-positive, oxidase-negative cocci with colony morphology compatible with that of Staphylococcus
species, coagulase activity was determined via the tube coagulase test using rabbit plasma. The susceptibility of staphylococci
to various antimicrobial drugs was assessed by the disk diffusion method. To define genetic relativity of staphylococci species,
enterobacterial repetitive intergenic consensus test was done. Finally, biopsy samples of affected skin were obtained from 42
of the 61 studied dogs. The most frequently recovered bacterial genus was Staphylococcus (32/43 isolates, 74.41%) including:
S. epidermidis (22/43 isolates, 51.16%), S. aureus (7/43 isolates, 16.27%) and S. pseudintermedius (3/43 isolates, 6.97%).
Staphylococci species resistance was most commonly seen against amoxicillin (94.11%), penicillin (83.35%) and ampicillin
(76.47%). Resistant to cephalexin and cefoxitin was 5.88% and 2.94%, respectively. A total of 27 of the staphylococci isolated
(84.37%) were resistant to at least one antimicrobial agent. 16 different patterns were recognized among 22 isolates of S.
epidermidis (one strain was not typed). Among 7 isolates of S. aureus, 3 different patterns were observed.
khoshnegah@um.ac.irJavad Khoshnegah et al., J Pigment Disord 2017, 4:2 (Suppl)
DOI: 10.4172/2376-0427-C1-002