COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF ANTIMICROBIAL STRENGTH OF THREE MOST COMMON ANTIBIOTICS USED IN ENUGU


  • Department: Microbiology
  • Project ID: MCB0003
  • Access Fee: ₦5,000
  • Pages: 44 Pages
  • Chapters: 5 Chapters
  • Methodology: Experiment and Formula
  • Reference: YES
  • Format: Microsoft Word
  • Views: 2,654
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COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF ANTIMICROBIAL STRENGTH OF THREE MOST COMMON ANTIBIOTICS USED IN ENUGU
ABSTRACT

In comparing the antimicrobial strength of three most common antibiotics, which includes: streptomycin chloranphenicol and gentarccin.
Samples of urine and high vaginal swab (H.V.S) were collected from park lane Enugu. The organisms isolated were pure culture of staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli
Sensitivity test was carried out with  the use of sensitivity disk containing various minimum inhibitory concentration of the different antibiotics.
The result obtained shaved that gentamicn was more effective followed by chloramphenicol while some organisms shaved resistant to streptomycin.
LIST OF TABLE
TABLE 1        NUTRIENT AGAR
TABLE 2        BLOOD AGAR
TABLE 3:       ANTIBIOTICS AGAINST SYAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS
TABLE 4: ANTIBIOTIC AGAINST ESCHERICHIA COLI
LIST OF FIGURES
FIGURE 1:     STREPTOMYCIN
FIGURE 2:     CHLORAMPHENICOL
FIGURE3:      SENSITIVITY TEST ON STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS
FIGURE 4      SENSITIVITY TEST ON ESCHERICHIA COLI
FIGURE 5: STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS AGAINST ANTIBIOTICS
FIGURE 6: ESCHERICHIA COLI AGAINST ANTIBIOTICS
TABLE OF CONTEANT
CHAPTER ONE
1.0              Introduction
1.1              Historical background
1.2              Aims and objective
1.3              Hypothesis
1.4              Statement of problem
1.5              Scope of study
1.6              Limitation of study
CHAPTER TWO
2.0              Literature review
3.1              Procurement of antibiotics
3.1.1    streptomycin
2.1.2        Chloramphenicol
2.1.3        Gentamicin
2.2              Antimicrobial activity in vitro
2.3              Antimicrobial activity in vivo
2.4              Resistance to antimicrobial  drugs
2.5              Factors affecting antimicrobial activity
2.6              Clinical use of antibiotics
2.7              Characteristic of antibiotics
CHAPTER THREE
3.0              Materials and method
3.1              Sample collection
3.1.1        Media composition
3.1.2        Direction for the preparation of nutrient agar
3.1.3        Direction for the preparation of blood agar
3.1.4        Material used for the prewritten of media
CHAPTER FOUR
4.0              Isolation and identification procedures
4.1.1 Isolation and identification of staphylococcus aureus
4.1.2 Isolation and identification of escherichia coli
4.2              Sensitivity test
CHAPTER FIVE
5.0              RECOMMENDATION
5.1              CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1                 HISTORICAL BACK GROUND
Antibiotics are chemicals when the chemical are put into the body, they stop the growth of kinds of germs. They help the body to fight diseases. More than 3,000 years ago ancient people stumbled over the discovery that some moulds could be used as a cure. The egyptians, the chinese, and indians of central American would use mold to treat rashes and infected would. At that time they didn’t understand either diseases or treatment. As time went on, people began to gain some insight of disease. In the 1860 Louis Pasteur Shaw that many disease were caused it bacteria. Later he discovered that we may be able to fight germ and other microbes. It was two German doctors, who were first to make an effective medication form microbes. Kudo if and Emmerich and Oscar has conducted their experiment in the  1890. They proved that germ that would for another. All the men did was to take the germ from infected bandages and grow then in a test tube. They would  then isolate a particular germ that caused green in factions in open would. This germs was bacteria called Bacillus pyoicyaneus. They put then into another test tube containing other type of bacteria, it was  then it happened that the bacillus pyocyaneus wiped out the other disease germ. The germs that was killed were those that caused cholera, typhoid, diphtheria and anthrau. From this the two men created a medication that they called pyoanase, it was the first antibiotics used in hospitals.
In 1928 Alexander Fleming, a Scottish scientist, discovered penicillin, the first antibiotics. He was keeping in a petn dish when a speck of mold fell in, it cause the mold to grow on the nutrient agar used to feed the bacteria. Surpassingly, it stopped the growth of the bacteria. Fleming through the mold called penicillin notatum produced a substance that killed the bacteria and so called it penicillin. However, he was not able to entrant it from broth in which he grew the mold.
In 1945, Waksman used the word antibiotics for the first time and proposed that it can be defined as a chemical substance of microbial origin that possesses antibiotic powers. He discovered a drug called streptomycin. It onginated frommicrobes found in soil and was a cure for many intestinal  diseases. Now antibiotics like penicillin and streptomycin was discovered. Each was effective against certain disease, but scientist wanted more. Doctors however, anted broad spectrum drug. That is a single antibiotics that could cure many disease
The search proved successful one laboratory discovered Aureonycin, which is a drug that does the job of penicillin and streptomycin. Another laboratory discovered chloromycin.
In 1949, yet another laboratory came with one of the effective  antibiotics ever found, terranycin. This drug could be used against many bacteria disease (Katzung, 1994).
1.2              AIMS AND OBJECTIVE
1.                  To identify causative organism that are delectious to mans health.
2.                  To determine the potency of the different antibiotics.
3.                  To know the type of organism sensitive to the different antibiotics.
1.3                 HYPOTHESIS
H0-       Streptomycin is more effective
H1 – Streptonyin is not  effective
H2  -     Chloramphenicol is not effective
H3-  Chloramphenicol is not effective
H4- Gentamicin is more effective
H5 –Gentanicin  is not effective
H6 – Comparing the strength of the three antibiotics.
1.4              STATEMENT OF PROBLEM
Due to the problem encountered , most people abuse antibiotics owing to the general belief that antibiotics can be used  in the treatment of all kinds of diseases. This can result to drug resist. Accumulation of these drugs can lead to internal denage.  Hence this study which compares the antimicrobial strength of three antibiotics.
1.5              SOCOP OF STUDY
This work will be limited to the maximum inhibitory concentration and know the organism sensitive to the different antibiotics under certain temperature.

  • Department: Microbiology
  • Project ID: MCB0003
  • Access Fee: ₦5,000
  • Pages: 44 Pages
  • Chapters: 5 Chapters
  • Methodology: Experiment and Formula
  • Reference: YES
  • Format: Microsoft Word
  • Views: 2,654
Get this Project Materials
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