Antimicrobial Resistance Genes
Cross-source consensus on Antimicrobial Resistance Genes from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
How it works
Background
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- Because BARNARDS-I was cross-sectional, it could not determine when ARGs were acquired, whether they persisted, or how early-life exposures shaped their trajectories. — Cohort profile: Infant Gut Bacterial Study in Nigeria (INBUGS-NG)
- BARNARDS-I found unexpectedly high carriage of ARGs, including ESBL and carbapenemase genes, in neonatal stool at sites in Nigeria and other low- and middle-income countries. — Cohort profile: Infant Gut Bacterial Study in Nigeria (INBUGS-NG)
- Planned longitudinal analyses will examine ARG stability and persistence across the first year, with particular focus on infants exposed to antibiotics early or repeatedly. — Cohort profile: Infant Gut Bacterial Study in Nigeria (INBUGS-NG)
- Long-read shotgun metagenomic sequencing using Oxford Nanopore technology supports plasmid-level identification of ARGs. — Cohort profile: Infant Gut Bacterial Study in Nigeria (INBUGS-NG)
- Metagenomic relatedness alone cannot prove transmission dynamics with certainty. — Cohort profile: Infant Gut Bacterial Study in Nigeria (INBUGS-NG)