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Antibacterial Resistance Genes Frequently Detected in Nigeria
Abstract
The emergence and reemergence of antibacterial resistance has made it more difficult for a choice of effective antibiotics that
treat bacterial infections. Bacteria that are resistant to antimicrobial agents are usually spread from person to person, or from
non-human sources in the environment. These non-human sources could aid in the spread of resistant genes as well as resistant
pathogens. Systematic review was conducted in accordance to the guideline of PRISMA, 55 relevant literatures from the 152
searched were identified from PubMed, Google Scholar and AJOL using related specific search terms. Only studies carried out
or related to Nigeria from January, 2000 to August, 2022. All data obtained from the reviewed articles were presented in
percentages using MS Excel 2013. The most prevalent antibacterial genes were blaCTX-M-15 and blaTEM with the prevalence
of 2.77%; sul1 and tetA with the prevalence rate of 2.31%; tetM with the prevalence rate of 2.08%; and blaCTX-M, blaSHV,
mecA, sul2 and tetB having a prevalence of 1.85%. The sources from which these resistance genes were identified are humans
(55.7%) and non-humans (44.3%). The most prevalent bacteria harboring these resistant genes were Escherichia coli (13.2%),
Staphylococcus aureus (5.66%) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (5.03%). Antibiotics resistance has continued to threaten the success
of modern medicine, with more resistance strains emerging constantly. The wide distribution of antibacterial resistance genes in
non-human sources makes them reservoirs of these resistant genes which have the potential of being transferred from commensal
microorganisms to human pathogens.