ASYMPTOMATIC BACTERIURIA IN PREGNANCY IN OSOGBO WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO STAPHYLOCOCCUS SAPROPHYTICUS

Authors

  • Samuel S. Taiwo
  • Idayat I. Adegbite
  • Olusegun A. Adefioye

Keywords:

Asymptomatic, Bacteriuria, Staphylococcus saprophyticus, Nigeria

Abstract

Asymptomatic bacteriuria is a common clinical entity in pregnancy but the prevalence due to S. saprophyticus, an established uro-pathogen in sexually active women, remained largely unknown in Nigeria. The prevalence of asymptomatic significant bacteriuria due to S. saprophyticus was therefore determined among 431 pregnant women in a tertiary health institution, Southwestern Nigeria. Clean catch specimens of mid stream, early morning voided urine, collected on two occasions with an interval of four weeks, were subjected to microbial analysis and quantitative culture. All cultures with significant growth (≥105 CFU/ml) were characterized and S. saprophyticus identified using conventional biochemical scheme. A total of 862 duplicate urine samples were analyzed; 19.5% were positive for the same bacteria on two consecutive samples, giving a prevalence rate of 19.5% for asymptomatic bacteriuria. S. saprophyticus was recovered from consecutive urine of 2.6% of the women, 54.5% of whom had significant pyuria. The isolates were all susceptible to vancomycin, gentamicin and fluoroquinolones, but 18.2% were methicillin resistant strains. From the result of this study, all pregnant women should be routinely screened for S. saprophyticus urinary carriage.

Author Biography

Samuel S. Taiwo

Department of Medical Microbiology and Parasitology, College of Health Sciences, Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, PMB 4400, Osogbo, Nigeria

Downloads

Published

2009-07-15

How to Cite

Taiwo, S. S., Adegbite, I. I., & Adefioye, O. A. (2009). ASYMPTOMATIC BACTERIURIA IN PREGNANCY IN OSOGBO WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO STAPHYLOCOCCUS SAPROPHYTICUS. African Journal of Infectious Diseases (AJID), 3(2), 36–43. Retrieved from https://athmsi.org/journals/index.php/AJID/article/view/982

Issue

Section

Articles