Jérôme Ateudjieu1,2,3, Landry Beyala Bita’a1,2,&, Etienne Guenou2, Anthony Njimbia Chebe2, Benjamin Azike Chukuwchindun1,2, André Pascal Goura1,2, Anne-Cécile Zoung-Kani Bisseck3,4
ntroduction:In most of the health facilities in Cameroon, the management of patients with diarrhea is based on presumptive diagnosis due to limited  laboratory  resources.  This  study  aimed  to  determine  germs  profile  and  their  susceptibility  to  antibiotics  usually  prescribed  against pathogenic  bacteria  associated  with  diarrheas  at  the  Kousseri  Regional  Hospital  Annex  from  July  to October  2015.Methods:We  conducted  a descriptive and cross-sectional study of all consenting individual presenting with diarrhea to the Kousseri Regional Hospital Annex during the study period. Stool samples were collected from each patient. Patientdata were collected via anonymous questionnaire with face to face interview. Each stool  sample  was  grown  on  media  for  enterobacteria  and  analyzed  following  the  standard  stool  culture  method.  The  sensitivity of  the  isolated strains to the most frequently prescribed antibiotics was assessed and the proportions of patients with each pathogen germ and of germ sensitive to each antibiotic were estimated.Results:Out of 150 patients with diarrhea included in the study 45(30.0%) had enteropathogenic bacteria, of which 37(82.2%) in children aged 0-5 years. Escherichia coli was the the most common bacterium(30 cases, 66%) followed by Salmonella spp(7 cases, 16%), Vibrio spp,(5 cases, 11%), Aeromonas spp(2 cases, 4%), and Shigella spp(1 cases, 2%). Susceptibility tests were performed which showed  that  17(56.7%),  14(46.7%)  and  5(16.7%)  E.  coli  were  susceptible  to  ciprofloxacin,  ceftriaxone,  cotrimoxazole  respectively;  4(57.14%), 2(28.57%) Salmonella spp. were susceptible to ceftriaxone and cotrimoxazole respectively.Conclusion:Nearly a third of the cases of diarrheas at the  Kousseri  Regional  Hospital  Annex  in  the  season  of  rain  were  associated  with  at  least  a  pathogenic  bacterium.  The  susceptibility  of  isolated germs  to  commonly  prescribed  antibiotics  was  very  limited.  Health  staff  in  the  facilities  in  the  extreme  north  of  Cameroon  prescribe  antibiotic against diarrheas on the basis of presumptive diagnosis. Hence, the necessity to implement a system for the monitoring of theassociated germ profile and of their susceptibility to commonly prescribed antibiotics.
Key words:Profile, antibiotic susceptibility, bacteria, diarrhea