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ABSTRACT: Importance
The occurrence of human bacterial infections resistant to antimicrobial therapy has been increasing. It has been postulated that antimicrobial resistance was inevitable, but the life span of the antimicrobial era has been prematurely compromised due to the misuse of antimicrobials in clinical and agricultural practices. Direct evidence relating the use of antimicrobials in livestock production to diminished human health outcomes due to antimicrobial resistance is lacking, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has taken an approach to maximize therapeutic efficacy and minimize the selection of resistant microorganisms through judicious use of antimicrobials. This study demonstrated that prophylactic in-feed treatment of chlortetracycline administered for 5 days to calves entering feedlots is judicious, as this therapy reduced animal morbidity, reduced the use of antimicrobials more critical to human health, and had no long-term impact on the occurrence of antimicrobial-resistant E. coli.
SUBMITTER: Agga GE
PROVIDER: S-EPMC5118930 | biostudies-literature | 2016 Dec
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Applied and environmental microbiology 20161121 24
Concerns have been raised that in-feed chlortetracycline (CTC) may increase antimicrobial resistance (AMR), specifically tetracycline-resistant (TET<sup>r</sup>) Escherichia coli and third-generation cephalosporin-resistant (3GC<sup>r</sup>) E. coli We evaluated the impact of a 5-day in-feed CTC prophylaxis on animal health, TET<sup>r</sup> E. coli, and 3GC<sup>r</sup> E. coli A control group of cattle (n = 150) received no CTC, while a CTC group (n = 150) received in-feed CTC (10 mg/lb of body ...[more]