Isolate and diagnose bacteria that cause urinary tract infection and test their sensitivity to certain antibiotics and changes in the level of immune proteins resulting from infection

Authors

  • Haneen F. Abbas
  • Ayyub J. Al-Bayaty
  • Huda S. Khuder

Abstract

The current study included the collection of 250 diuresis and blood samples for patients with urinary tract infections in addition to 50 samples of diuresis and blood not infected as a control sample, where it included females and males and ages ranging from 15-60 years and by 60% females and 40% males of patients referred to the laboratories of the city of Tikrit, gave 200 samples positive bacterial growth by 80% as it gave two types of growth negative to the dye of Kram (125) sample by 62.5% and positive to the dye of Karam(75) by 37.5%, while it did not Another 50 samples give any bacterial growth. The results of isolation and diagnosis showed that the type E. coli was prevalent among bacterial etiology by 30%, while the lowest percentage was for the type Enterobacter aerogenes by 1.5%. The results of the study showed a significant increase in the level of immune proteins compared to control samples, where the level of CRP, IgA IL-17, in the serum of the affected reached 44.99±8.03, 19.49±7.81, 451.4±39.6 respectively, while the levels in the serum of the healthy reached 23.20±3.19, 2.90±1.37, 266.1±52.4 respectively.

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Published

2022-11-06