Publikasi Scopus 2024 per tanggal 31 Maret 2024 (233 artikel)

Paramitadevi Y.V.; Priadi C.R.; Rahmatika I.; Rukmana A.; Moersidik S.S.
Paramitadevi, Yudith Vega (57194572023); Priadi, Cindy Rianti (36615805800); Rahmatika, Iftita (57215590090); Rukmana, Andriansjah (35491487100); Moersidik, Setyo Sarwanto (55340741400)
57194572023; 36615805800; 57215590090; 35491487100; 55340741400
Resistance profile of Escherichia coli isolated from stool, feed, and compost sources to antibiotics in Sukabumi
2024
E3S Web of Conferences
485
07001
0
Environmental Engineering Study Program, Civil Engineering Dept., Universitas Indonesia, Indonesia; Microbiology Dept., Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia, Indonesia; Environmental Engineering and Management Study Program, The Vocational Studies, IPB University, Indonesia
Paramitadevi Y.V., Environmental Engineering Study Program, Civil Engineering Dept., Universitas Indonesia, Indonesia, Environmental Engineering and Management Study Program, The Vocational Studies, IPB University, Indonesia; Priadi C.R., Environmental Engineering Study Program, Civil Engineering Dept., Universitas Indonesia, Indonesia; Rahmatika I., Environmental Engineering Study Program, Civil Engineering Dept., Universitas Indonesia, Indonesia; Rukmana A., Microbiology Dept., Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Indonesia, Indonesia; Moersidik S.S., Environmental Engineering Study Program, Civil Engineering Dept., Universitas Indonesia, Indonesia
Antibiotic-resistant E. coli is a growing concern in various settings, but environmental studies are rare compared to clinical research on human and animal health. This study aimed to identify the prevalence of E. coli bacteria resistant to different antibiotics in the environment by examining E. coli resistant to cefotaxime isolated from ruminant stool, feed, and compost. The phenotyping test was conducted through antibiotic susceptibility test using Kirby-Bauer disk-diffusion method, followed by the One-Way variance (ANOVA) analysis of the antibiotic susceptibility test results. Of the 12 isolates exposed to cefotaxime, six showed resistance to this antibiotic, and all isolates, including those resistant to cefotaxime, were resistant to eight out of ten types of antibiotics. All isolates had resistance to at least two to five types of antibiotics. The phenotypic pattern between fecal isolates and non-fecal isolates did not differ significantly, except for the antibiotics amoxicillin (p≤0.05) and ampicillin (p≤0.05). The overlapping resistance patterns observed in animal feed, animal stool, and compost suggest a potential link between their microbiological compositions. © The Authors, published by EDP Sciences.
Center for Higher Education Funding
The first author expresses sincere gratitude to the Center for Higher Education Funding and the Indonesia Endowment Funds for Education for their generous support in financing her doctoral studies. The first author would also like to express her heartfelt appreciation to Heryudiantov Vibowo, lecturer at IPB University's Veterinary Paramedic Study Program, for his invaluable contribution to the man
EDP Sciences
25550403
Conference paper
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182
20140