Abstract

IN 1969, after carbenicillin had been in use for three years in this unit, highly resistant strains of Pseudomonas aeruginosa were isolated for the first time1. Because these resistant strains included, from their first appearance, representatives of two unrelated types, it seemed likely that the resistance was transferable; this hypothesis was supported by experiments showing the transfer of carbenicillin resistance between Ps. aeruginosa and Escherichia coli K12 in vitro and in vivo2–4;. The resistant Ps. aeruginosa produced a penicillinase (β lactamase) similar to that normally produced by some strains of Enterobacteria and different from that normally produced by Ps. aeruginosa2,3, so it seemed likely that the Ps. aeruginosa had initially acquired resistance by the transfer of an R factor from a carbenicillin-resistant member of the Enterobacteriaceae colonizing the same burn. This hypothesis is now supported by a study on strains of Enterobacteria and Ps. aeruginosa isolated in a number of hospitals. We have also found evidence suggesting that Ps. aeruginosa which has acquired this R factor may not show resistance until it has been exposed repeatedly to carbenicillin.

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