AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aimed to analyze seasonal changes in water quality, antibiotic residue levels, and antibiotic resistance in samples from the Kshipra River in Central India over a year.
  • - Researchers collected samples during different seasons in 2014, testing for physical, chemical, and microbiological properties, as well as antibiotic resistance patterns using sophisticated techniques.
  • - Findings indicated significant seasonal differences in water quality and antibiotic resistance, highlighting a pressing need for regulations to manage antibiotic pollution in this environmentally and culturally important river.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To characterize the seasonal variation, over one year, in water-quality, antibiotic residue levels, antibiotic resistance genes and antibiotic resistance in isolates from water and sediment of the Kshipra River in Central India.

Methods: Water and sediment samples were collected from seven selected points from the Kshipra River in the Indian city of Ujjain in the summer, rainy season, autumn and winter seasons in 2014. Water quality parameters (physical, chemical and microbiological) were analyzed using standard methods. High-performance liquid chromatography⁻tandem mass spectrometry was used to determine the concentrations of antibiotic residues. In river water and sediment samples, antibiotic resistance and multidrug resistance patterns of isolated to 17 antibiotics were tested and genes coding for resistance and phylogenetic groups were detected using multiplex polymerase chain reaction. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Fisher tests were applied to determine seasonal variation.

Results: In river water, seasonal variation was significantly associated with various water quality parameters, presence of sulfamethoxazole residues, bacteria resistant to ampicillin, cefepime, meropenem, amikacin, gentamicin, tigecycline, multidrug resistance and CTX-M-1 gene. The majority of the Extended Spectrum Beta-Lactamase (ESBL)-producing isolates from river water and sediment in all different seasons belonged to phylogenetic group A or B1.

Conclusions: Antibiotic pollution, resistance and resistance genes in the Kshipra River showed significant seasonal variation. Guidelines and regulatory standards are needed to control environmental dissemination of these “pollutants” in this holy river.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6024939PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061281DOI Listing

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