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BACKGROUND: due to unhygienic condition and poor udder health can cause infections, especially in infants and elders or in immunocompromised persons. Possession of antimicrobial resistance genes by commensal bacteria present in milk makes the issue more serious. AIM: from milk samples collected from different parts of West Bengal, India, to assess the potential risk associated with the food. MATERIALS AND METHODS: gene. Antibiogram of the ESBL-positive isolates was done using common 12 antibiotics by disc diffusion method. RESULTS: gene. Antibiogram of these ESBL-positive isolates revealed the drugs such as colistin (100%), levofloxacin (83.33%), and imipenem (66.67%) to be highly sensitive against this pathogen but drugs such as cefotaxime (100%), ceftazidime (91.67%), amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (83.33%), tetracycline (75.00%), and gentamicin (58.33%) to be very much resistant. CONCLUSION: strains prevalent in the bovine milk samples were positive for ESBL production and are resistant to most of the common antimicrobials which may be alarming for human health.
Batabyal et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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