The mobility and dissemination of blaOXA-48 and blaNDM carbapenemase genes within clinical Escherichia coli isolatesTools Ridley, Zack (2025) The mobility and dissemination of blaOXA-48 and blaNDM carbapenemase genes within clinical Escherichia coli isolates. MRes thesis, University of Nottingham.
AbstractThe spread of antimicrobial resistance within the global population is a matter of serious concern with extensive impacts, but there is a particular severity to disproportionately of resistance spread within hospital settings. These settings act as hotspots and epicentres for the generation and dissemination of a sleugh of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. The environment of high antibiotic use, high concentration of infected individuals or immunocompromised individuals and the frequency of exposure to external bacteria through catheters and IVs etc, provides the ideal environment for the development of multidrug resistant bacterial isolates with unprecedented resistance to commonly applied clinical antibiotics and mechanisms of gene mobility.
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