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Salmonellosis detection and evidence of antibiotic resistance in an urban raccoon population in a highly populated area, Costa Rica. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Wild animals like raccoons contribute to the transmission of zoonotic diseases, including Salmonella, in urban environments.
  • In a study of 97 raccoons in a tropical urban area of Costa Rica, almost half (49%) of the fecal samples tested positive for different serovars of Salmonella, with S. Hartford being the most common.
  • The research revealed that some of these Salmonella strains demonstrated antibiotic resistance, highlighting the need for monitoring this issue due to raccoons' role as reservoirs for these pathogens in human ecosystems.

Article Abstract

Wild animals are involved in zoonotic disease transmission cycles. These are generally complex and poorly understood, especially among animals adapted to life in human ecosystems. Raccoons are reservoirs and effective carriers for infectious agents such as Salmonella throughout different environments and contribute to the transference of resistance genes. This study examined the presence of circulating Salmonella sp. in a population of raccoons in a tropical urban environment and evaluated resistance to antibiotics commonly used to treat salmonellosis. A total of 97 raccoons of different ages and sex were included in this study. 49% (38-60 CI) of the faecal samples were positive for Salmonella spp. The study identified 15 circulating serovars with the most prevalent being S. Hartford (7/15), S. Typhimurium (4/15) and S. Bovismorbificans (4/15). These serovars correspond to the serovars detected in humans with clinical symptoms in Costa Rica. 9.5% of the Salmonella strains recovered demonstrated ciprofloxacin resistance, and 7.1% showed resistance to nalidixic acid. This study provides evidence of multiple Salmonella serovars circulating in a population of urban raccoons in Costa Rica. Furthermore, the study confirms the existence of antimicrobial resistance to two antibiotics used to treat human salmonellosis. The findings emphasize the role of the raccoon as a reservoir of Salmonella in the Greater Metropolitan Area of Costa Rica (GAM) and stress the need for active monitoring of the presence and possible spread in antibiotic resistance due to this peri-domestic carnivore.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6852039PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/zph.12635DOI Listing

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