Abstract

Culture and sensitivity tests were performed on tubercle bacilli from patients with tuberculosis attending a provincial general hospital in Sierra Leone, who appeared clinically to have drug-resistant infections. Amongst the general intake of patients from 1978 to 1984 there was a 10.5 % incidence of isoniazid resistance, with 7.7 of patients having strains resistant to both streptomycin and isoniazid, 1.3 resistant to rifampicin, and 0.8 % resistant to ethambutol. Multiple drug resistance was more frequent than single drug resistance. This high incidence is largely due to inadequate and irregular supplies of first line drugs.

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