Occurrence and antimicrobial susceptibility of Salmonella isolates recovered from the pig slaughter process in Romania

Authors

  • Adriana Morar Banat's University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine King Michael I of Romania, Timişoara, Romania
  • Claudia Sala Banat's University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine King Michael I of Romania, Timişoara, Romania
  • Kálmán Imre Banat's University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine King Michael I of Romania, Timişoara, Romania

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3855/jidc.5236

Keywords:

Salmonella, slaughterhouse, pig meat, multidrug resistance

Abstract

Introduction: Reported human salmonellosis cases have increased in Romania. Antibiotic susceptibility testing of Salmonella strains isolated from pork and chicken meat indicate a worrying multidrug resistance pattern. This study aimed to investigate the occurrence of Salmonella and to evaluate the antibiotic resistance of Salmonella strains in a pig slaughterhouse-processing complex, which receives animals from 30% of the large industrialized swine farms in Romania.

Methodology: A total of 108 samples, including pork (n = 47), packaged pork products (n = 44), scald water sludge (n = 8), and detritus from the hair removal machine of the slaughterhouse (n = 9) were examined for the presence of Salmonella through standard methods. The antibiotic susceptibility of the isolated strains to 17 antibiotics was tested using the Vitek 2 system.

Results: Twenty-six (24.1%) samples were found to be Salmonella positive; this included 25.5% of meat samples and 15.9% of packaged products, as well as samples from two different points of the slaughter (41.2%). Resistance was observed against tetracycline (61.5%), ampicillin (50%), piperacillin (50%), trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (34.6%), amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (26.9%), nitrofurantion (23.1%), cefazolin (15.4%), piperacillin/tazobactam (7.7%), imipenem (3.8%), ciprofloxacin (3.8%), and norfloxacin (3.8%). No resistance towards cefoxitin, cefotaxime, ceftazidime, cefepime, amikacin, and gentamicin was found.

Conclusions: Our study demonstrated the occurrence of multidrug-resistant Salmonella strains in the investigated pork production complex and highlighted it as a potential source of human infections. The results demonstrate the seriousness of antibiotic resistance of Salmonella in Romania, while providing a useful insight for the treatment of human salmonellosis by specialists.

Author Biographies

Adriana Morar, Banat's University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine King Michael I of Romania, Timişoara, Romania

Lecturer at the Animal Production and Veterinary Public Health Department

Claudia Sala, Banat's University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine King Michael I of Romania, Timişoara, Romania

Associate Professor at the Animal Production and Veterinary Public Health Department

Kálmán Imre, Banat's University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine King Michael I of Romania, Timişoara, Romania

Assistant Professor at the Animal Production and Veterinary Public Health Department

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Published

2015-01-15

How to Cite

1.
Morar A, Sala C, Imre K (2015) Occurrence and antimicrobial susceptibility of Salmonella isolates recovered from the pig slaughter process in Romania. J Infect Dev Ctries 9:099–104. doi: 10.3855/jidc.5236

Issue

Section

Brief Original Articles