Chris Rowe Taitt, Tomasz Leski, David Stenger, Gary J. Vora, Brent House, Matilda Nicklasson, Guillermo Pimentel, Daniel V. Zurawski, Benjamin C. Kirkup, et al.
Proceedings Volume Sensing Technologies for Global Health, Military Medicine, Disaster Response, and Environmental Monitoring II; and Biometric Technology for Human Identification IX, 83710X (2012) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.924569
The prevalence of multidrug-resistant infections in personnel wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan has made it challenging
for physicians to choose effective therapeutics in a timely fashion. To address the challenge of identifying the potential
for drug resistance, we have developed the Antimicrobial Resistance Determinant Microarray (ARDM) to provide DNAbased
analysis for over 250 resistance genes covering 12 classes of antibiotics. Over 70 drug-resistant bacteria from
different geographic regions have been analyzed on ARDM, with significant differences in patterns of resistance
identified: genes for resistance to sulfonamides, trimethoprim, chloramphenicol, rifampin, and macrolide-lincosamidesulfonamide
drugs were more frequently identified in isolates from sources in Iraq/Afghanistan. Of particular concern
was the presence of genes responsible for resistance to many of the last-resort antibiotics used to treat war traumaassociated
infections.