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16 June 2022 BACTERIAL IDENTIFICATION AND ANTIBIOTIC SENSITIVITY FROM THE ABSCESSES OF CAPTIVE TORTOISES—CLINICAL ANTIBIOTIC RECOMMENDATIONS
Yo-Wen Wang, Han-You Lin, Jane-Fang Yu, Lih-Chiann Wang
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Abstract

Bacterial abscesses are commonly seen in tortoises. The morbidity and the resultant mortality are high. Multifactorial problems, antibiotics misapplication. and antibiotic-resistant bacteria make abscess treatment complicated and ineffective. This study identifies the etiological bacterial species and determines the best antibiotics for abscess treatment in captive tortoises. Sterile swab specimens from 40 tortoises with abscesses were analyzed using the Analytical Profile Index (API) system. Sixty-five bacteria species were identified covering facultative anaerobic gram-negative (n = 30, 46.2%), facultative anaerobic gram-positive (n = 19, 29.2%), and aerobic gram-negative bacteria (n = 16, 24.6%). The antibiotic sensitivity of these bacteria to 30 antibiotics was assessed using the Kirby–Bauer disk-diffusion method. Greater than 80% anaerobic gram-negative bacterial species showed sensitivity to amikacin and ceftazidime. Greater than 80% anaerobic gram-positive bacterial species were sensitive to amoxicillin, ampicillin, carbenicillin, and penicillin. In addition, more than 80% aerobic gram-negative bacterial species were sensitive to ceftazidime, colistin sulphate, amikacin, gentamicin, kanamycin, polymyxin B, and tobramycin. This study provides clinicians significant information for initial antibiotic options, which could elevate the abscess therapy success rate and improve the life quality of tortoises.

Copyright 2022 by American Association of Zoo Veterinarians
Yo-Wen Wang, Han-You Lin, Jane-Fang Yu, and Lih-Chiann Wang "BACTERIAL IDENTIFICATION AND ANTIBIOTIC SENSITIVITY FROM THE ABSCESSES OF CAPTIVE TORTOISES—CLINICAL ANTIBIOTIC RECOMMENDATIONS," Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine 53(2), 424-432, (16 June 2022). https://doi.org/10.1638/2021-0093
Accepted: 10 February 2022; Published: 16 June 2022
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