Abstract
A method was developed to determine the susceptibility of Haemophilus influenzae to ampicillin, cefamandole, and chloramphenicol by using the MS-2 system (Abbott Laboratories) for determining minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC). The MS-2 results for 132 strains of H. influenzae were compared with the results of agar disk diffusion, agar dilution, and beta-lactamase tests. Twenty-four strains (18.2%) of H. influenzae were resistant to ampicillin by the agar dilution method, as opposed to 25 strains by the MS-2 method. For a beta-lactamase-negative strain, the agar dilution MIC was 4 micrograms/ml, and the MS-2 MIC was 16 micrograms/ml. Twenty-one strains produced beta-lactamase; two beta-lactamase-negative strains were resistant by MS-2, agar dilution, and agar disk diffusion. In addition, one beta-lactamase-negative strain, for which the agar dilution MIC was 32 micrograms/ml and the MS-2 MIC was 16 micrograms/ml, was sensitive by agar disk diffusion. Overall, the MS-2 method compared favorably with the agar dilution method for determining the MIC of ampicillin, cefamandole, and chloramphenicol for H. influenzae.
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