Research Article

Etiologic Agents of Bacterial Sepsis and Their Antibiotic Susceptibility Patterns among Patients Living with Human Immunodeficiency Virus at Gondar University Teaching Hospital, Northwest Ethiopia

Table 5

Multidrug resistance profile of frequently isolate bacteria among HIV infected patients in the University of Gondar Teaching Hospital from March 1, 2013, to May 2, 2013.

Bacterial speciesAntimicrobial agentsNumber of resistant isolates (%)

S. aureusAMP and P2 (15.3)
AMP and SXT2 (15.3)
AMP and MET1 (7.6)
AMP, MET, and OXA1 (7.6)
AMP, SXT, and P1 (7.6)
AMP, SXT, E, and TE1 (7.6)
AMP, SXT, E, TE, and CAF1 (7.6)
AMP, SXT, MET, TE, P, and OXA 1 (7.6)
AMP, P, E, TE, MET, and OXA 1 (7.6)

CONSAMP and SXT 1 (12.5)
SXT and E1 (12.5)
SXT and MET1 (12.5)
SXT, MET, and E1 (12.5)
SXT, MET, OXA, P, and TE1 (12.5)
AMP, MET, CAF, CIP, E, P, SXT, and TE1 (12.5)
AMP, MET, CAF, CN, E, OXA, P, SXT, and TE1 (12.5)

AMP: ampicillin; SXT: sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim; CIP: ciprofloxacin; E: erythromycin; CN: gentamicin; MET: methicillin; P: penicillin; TE: tetracycline; CAF: chloramphenicol; OXA: oxacillin; CONS: coagulase negative staphylococci.