This study was designed to determine the prevalence of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) among pulmonary tuberculosis patients attending NnamdiAzikiwe University Teaching Hospital (NAUTH) Nnewi and St Patrick’s Hospital Mile 4 Abakaliki demographically. Patients with persistent cough for over two weeks were screened by Ziehl-Neelsen ZN technique for the presence of acid fast bacilli (AFB) in their sputum and a total of 103 patients with AFB positive sputum samples were recruited. The positive sputum samples were subjected to Xpert MTB/RIF assay (GeneXpert®, Cepheid USA) and culture on Lowestein Jensen medium for 42 days at 37°C. Drug susceptibility testing was done on the isolates using the nitrate reduction assay (NRA). Eighty-three 83 (80.6%) of the isolates were obtained from culture after suspected colonies were subjected to morphological, biochemical, and immunological tests and out of the 83 (80.6%) samples analysed by Xpert MTB/RIF assay 45 (67.2%) were rifampicin resistant. Age group 26-35 years showed the highest proportion of positive culture results (33.7%) followed by age group 18-25 (28.8%) years. Demographically, age group 26-35 years had a high prevalence rate of MDR-TB (50.0%) and female gender also showed high prevalence rate of MDR-RB (48.5%). Strikingly, educational status was significantly associated with MDR-TB (P=.020). St Patrick’s hospital had a high prevalence rate of MDR-TB (46.94%) when compared with NAUTH (38.9%) and these indicates that there is high prevalence of MDR-TB among patients with pulmonary TB in these sites. The demographic results of this study calls for urgent and serious intervention as MDR-TB prevalence is increasing even in the face of intense national TB control program.
Published in | Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering (Volume 6, Issue 1) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.cbe.20210601.12 |
Page(s) | 11-16 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
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Prevalence, MDR-TB, Demographic Factors, Patient
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APA Style
Chinenye Esther Okoro-Ani, Chima Innocent Ugbor, Stellamaris Ojiuzor Ibhawaegbele, Iniekong Philip Udoh, Chukwuma Paulinus Igweagu, et al. (2021). Prevalence of MDR-TB Based on Demographic Factors Among Patients Attending Nauth and St Patrick’s Hospital Mile 4 Abakaliki in Southeast Nigeria. Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, 6(1), 11-16. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cbe.20210601.12
ACS Style
Chinenye Esther Okoro-Ani; Chima Innocent Ugbor; Stellamaris Ojiuzor Ibhawaegbele; Iniekong Philip Udoh; Chukwuma Paulinus Igweagu, et al. Prevalence of MDR-TB Based on Demographic Factors Among Patients Attending Nauth and St Patrick’s Hospital Mile 4 Abakaliki in Southeast Nigeria. Chem. Biomol. Eng. 2021, 6(1), 11-16. doi: 10.11648/j.cbe.20210601.12
AMA Style
Chinenye Esther Okoro-Ani, Chima Innocent Ugbor, Stellamaris Ojiuzor Ibhawaegbele, Iniekong Philip Udoh, Chukwuma Paulinus Igweagu, et al. Prevalence of MDR-TB Based on Demographic Factors Among Patients Attending Nauth and St Patrick’s Hospital Mile 4 Abakaliki in Southeast Nigeria. Chem Biomol Eng. 2021;6(1):11-16. doi: 10.11648/j.cbe.20210601.12
@article{10.11648/j.cbe.20210601.12, author = {Chinenye Esther Okoro-Ani and Chima Innocent Ugbor and Stellamaris Ojiuzor Ibhawaegbele and Iniekong Philip Udoh and Chukwuma Paulinus Igweagu and Ogechukwu Calista Dozie-Nwakile and Chima Gabriel Ezeah}, title = {Prevalence of MDR-TB Based on Demographic Factors Among Patients Attending Nauth and St Patrick’s Hospital Mile 4 Abakaliki in Southeast Nigeria}, journal = {Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering}, volume = {6}, number = {1}, pages = {11-16}, doi = {10.11648/j.cbe.20210601.12}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cbe.20210601.12}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.cbe.20210601.12}, abstract = {This study was designed to determine the prevalence of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) among pulmonary tuberculosis patients attending NnamdiAzikiwe University Teaching Hospital (NAUTH) Nnewi and St Patrick’s Hospital Mile 4 Abakaliki demographically. Patients with persistent cough for over two weeks were screened by Ziehl-Neelsen ZN technique for the presence of acid fast bacilli (AFB) in their sputum and a total of 103 patients with AFB positive sputum samples were recruited. The positive sputum samples were subjected to Xpert MTB/RIF assay (GeneXpert®, Cepheid USA) and culture on Lowestein Jensen medium for 42 days at 37°C. Drug susceptibility testing was done on the isolates using the nitrate reduction assay (NRA). Eighty-three 83 (80.6%) of the isolates were obtained from culture after suspected colonies were subjected to morphological, biochemical, and immunological tests and out of the 83 (80.6%) samples analysed by Xpert MTB/RIF assay 45 (67.2%) were rifampicin resistant. Age group 26-35 years showed the highest proportion of positive culture results (33.7%) followed by age group 18-25 (28.8%) years. Demographically, age group 26-35 years had a high prevalence rate of MDR-TB (50.0%) and female gender also showed high prevalence rate of MDR-RB (48.5%). Strikingly, educational status was significantly associated with MDR-TB (P=.020). St Patrick’s hospital had a high prevalence rate of MDR-TB (46.94%) when compared with NAUTH (38.9%) and these indicates that there is high prevalence of MDR-TB among patients with pulmonary TB in these sites. The demographic results of this study calls for urgent and serious intervention as MDR-TB prevalence is increasing even in the face of intense national TB control program.}, year = {2021} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Prevalence of MDR-TB Based on Demographic Factors Among Patients Attending Nauth and St Patrick’s Hospital Mile 4 Abakaliki in Southeast Nigeria AU - Chinenye Esther Okoro-Ani AU - Chima Innocent Ugbor AU - Stellamaris Ojiuzor Ibhawaegbele AU - Iniekong Philip Udoh AU - Chukwuma Paulinus Igweagu AU - Ogechukwu Calista Dozie-Nwakile AU - Chima Gabriel Ezeah Y1 - 2021/03/22 PY - 2021 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cbe.20210601.12 DO - 10.11648/j.cbe.20210601.12 T2 - Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering JF - Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering JO - Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering SP - 11 EP - 16 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2578-8884 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.cbe.20210601.12 AB - This study was designed to determine the prevalence of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) among pulmonary tuberculosis patients attending NnamdiAzikiwe University Teaching Hospital (NAUTH) Nnewi and St Patrick’s Hospital Mile 4 Abakaliki demographically. Patients with persistent cough for over two weeks were screened by Ziehl-Neelsen ZN technique for the presence of acid fast bacilli (AFB) in their sputum and a total of 103 patients with AFB positive sputum samples were recruited. The positive sputum samples were subjected to Xpert MTB/RIF assay (GeneXpert®, Cepheid USA) and culture on Lowestein Jensen medium for 42 days at 37°C. Drug susceptibility testing was done on the isolates using the nitrate reduction assay (NRA). Eighty-three 83 (80.6%) of the isolates were obtained from culture after suspected colonies were subjected to morphological, biochemical, and immunological tests and out of the 83 (80.6%) samples analysed by Xpert MTB/RIF assay 45 (67.2%) were rifampicin resistant. Age group 26-35 years showed the highest proportion of positive culture results (33.7%) followed by age group 18-25 (28.8%) years. Demographically, age group 26-35 years had a high prevalence rate of MDR-TB (50.0%) and female gender also showed high prevalence rate of MDR-RB (48.5%). Strikingly, educational status was significantly associated with MDR-TB (P=.020). St Patrick’s hospital had a high prevalence rate of MDR-TB (46.94%) when compared with NAUTH (38.9%) and these indicates that there is high prevalence of MDR-TB among patients with pulmonary TB in these sites. The demographic results of this study calls for urgent and serious intervention as MDR-TB prevalence is increasing even in the face of intense national TB control program. VL - 6 IS - 1 ER -