Veterinary use and antibiotic resistance - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 15
About This Presentation
Title:

Veterinary use and antibiotic resistance

Description:

... data of FEDESA (European Federation of Animal Health) the amount of antibiotics ... contamination of vegetables with animal excrements ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:193
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 16
Provided by: Zaus
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Veterinary use and antibiotic resistance


1
Veterinary use and antibiotic resistance
  • 635.313
  • Genetisch modifizierte Organismen in der Umwelt
  • Svjetlana Medjakovic

2
Antibiotics in Veterinary use
  • more than 1 million tons released into biosphere
    in the last 50 years
  • globally estimated 50 for veterinary and
    agricultural purposes

3
Antibiotics in Veterinary use
  • veterinary use of antibiotics includes the use
    on
  • pets
  • farm animals
  • animals raised in aquaculture
  • for farm animals, antibiotics are used
  • in therapy and prophylaxis
  • to increase growth and feed efficiencies ? at
    subtherapeutical levels!

4
Antibiotics in Veterinary use
  • bacteria that develop antibiotic resistance in
    animals comprise
  • food-borne pathogens
  • opportunistic pathogens
  • commensal bacteria
  • the danger same antibiotic resistance genes and
    gene transfer mechanisms can be found in the
    microfloras of animals and humans
  • the accumulation of resistant bacteria and the
    spread via agriculture and direct contamination
    by the use of antibiotics in agriculture and
    veterinary medicine are documented

5
Antibiotics in Veterinary use
  • EU Switzerland in 1999 13.216 t antibiotics
  • according to data of FEDESA (European Federation
    of Animal Health) the amount of antibiotics which
    were used to increase growth and feed
    efficiencies was twice as high as 1997

6
Antibiotics in Veterinary use
  • in Austria at present there are 4 antibiotics
    permitted in animal feed (not for products of the
    AMA-cachet)
  • Monensin-Sodium
  • Sylinomycin-Sodium
  • Avilamycin
  • Flavophospholipol
  • according to a board decision of the EU they will
    be forbidden from january 2006

7
Antibiotic Resistance
  • existed even before antibiotics were used by
    humans
  • but this intrinsic form of resistance is not a
    major source of concern for human and animal
    health? majority of drug-resistant organisms have
    instead emerged as a result of genetic changes

8
Antibiotic Resistance
  • Acquired Resistance
  • mutational resistance ? result of spontaneous
    mutation in a locus on the microbial chromosome
    that controls susceptibility to a given
    antibiotic
  • transferable resistance ? plasmids, transposons
    and integrons, can code for multi-resistance

9
Antibiotic Resistance
  • Multiple Resistance
  • microorganisms resistant to a certain antibiotic
    may also be resistant to other antibiotics that
    share a mechanism of action or attachment
  • microorganisms may be resistant to several
    unrelated antibiotics. Use of one such
    anti-biotic will therefore also select for
    resistance to the other antibiotics!

10
Antibiotic Resistance
  • imprudent use of antibiotics leads to an
    increased selection pressure on bacteria
  • molecular analysis of antibiotic resistance
    genes, plasmids and transposons has demonstrated
    that identical elements are found in animals and
    humans

11
Epidemiology of Resistance
  • selection for resistant bacterial population
    whenever an animal or human host is exposed to
    antibiotics
  • selection depends upon
  • type of antibiotic
  • number of individuals treated
  • dosage regimen
  • duration of treatment

12
Resistance Transfer
  • multiple sources of resistant microorganisms
  • animals and their faeces
  • food of animal origin
  • fruits or vegetables
  • contaminated water
  • humans

13
Resistance Transfer via Farm Animals
  • carry-over in milk and meat products
  • contamination of vegetables with animal
    excrements
  • direct contamination with food containing
    resistant bacteria, through the digestive system
    is discussed, but up to present not clearly proved

14
Improvement of the Situation
  • reduce the occurrence of antimicrobial resistance
    in the microflora of food animals by removing
    selective pressure
  • study of Aarestrup et al. after banning
    Avoparcin in Denmark 1995, the prevalence of
    glycopepdtid-resistent fecal enterococci from
    food animals dropped from 72,7 to 5,8 in 2000!

15
Thanks for your Attention!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com