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Journal of Ecosystem & Ecography | ISSN: 2157-7625 | Volume 8

July 11-12, 2018 | Toronto, Canada

International Conference on

Environmental Microbiology & Microbial Ecology

International Conference on

Ecology, Ecosystems & Conservation Biology

&

Isolation and identification of predominant bacterial isolates infecting urinary tract

Marwa M Elmaghrabi

and

Hanan A Ghozlan

Alexandria University, Egypt

I

n this study, bacterial isolates of the most common urinary tract infection of 100 patients were investigated. Patients

comprised of equal gender and 50 patients were above 40 y/o and 50 were under 40 y/o. Only 55 patients were infected of

whom 63.6% females and 36.4% males, and among them, 66% were above 40 y/o, and 44% were under 40 y/o. The dipstick test

revealed 24% were positive for leukocytes, 13% were positive for nitrite, 14% were positive for both leukocyte and nitrite. Phase

contrast microscopy revealed 15% were positive for pyuria, and 34% were positive for bacteriuria. Morphological description

leukocytosis and bacteriuria colonies have grown on cultured on MacConkey and Blood agar plates were achieved, where 64

bacterial strains and four fungal strains were identified. Based on Gram staining and cell shapes, isolates were grouped into

three categories; Gram (+) cocci, Gram (-) coccobacilli, and Gram (-) bacilli, and analyzed using SYSTAT® program. Following

cluster analysis, a representative strain of each cluster was selected for identification using VITEK® system. Results showed

eight groups of isolates; 28

E. coli

, 9

Klebsiella pneumonia, 6 Pseudomonas aeruginosa, 6 Proteus mirabilis, 5 Staphylococcus

aureus, 4 Enterococcus faecalis, 4 Morganella morganii and 2 Pseudomonas fluorescens

. Large cells of

Candida albicans

were

also identified. Results indicated that the most predominant uropathogenic was

E. coli

as it was found in 43.7% of the isolates

followed by

Klebsiella Pneumonia

14.1%. Both

Pseudomonas aeruginosa

and

Proteus mirabilis

were represented in 9.4% of the

isolates while

Staphylococcus aureus

was recorded in 7.8% of the samples.

Enterococcus faecalis

and

Morganella morganii

were

represented in 6.2% of the isolates, however, only 3.2% was recorded for

Pseudomonas fluorescens

.

Biography

Marwa M Elmaghrabi is currently a permanent researcher at Stem Cells and Tissue Culture Labs, Faculty of Medicine, Alexandria University, a healthcare and

quality advisor at Canadian Academy of Sciences, Egypt. She has MSc in Microbiology (2012), Faculty of Science, Egypt. She accumulated 8-years of experience

in quality and infection control, and appointed to a number of key jobs; ISO 9001:2015 Lead Auditor, quality manager (2015-2017) and quality and infection control

manager (2013-2015) in Madina Fertility group, quality-specialist at Medical Research Institute, Alexandria University, 2015-2017, and senior quality assurance

specialist and internal auditor at Hassab-Labs Company, 2010-2013. She participated in a number of regional and international conferences and as a member

of Organizing Committee of Microbial Ecology-2018 pre-conference workshop. She contributed to PAN-African and electronic network project as a broadcasting

lecturer. She served as a member of the Egyptian Syndicate of Scientific professions, and Arab QOSH of safety professionals' experts.

marvenmomo@yahoo.com

Marwa M Elmaghrabi et al., J Ecosys Ecograph 2018, Volume 8

DOI: 10.4172/2157-7625-C3-038