Selection for mercurial resistance in hospital settings

Abstract
The frequency of resistance to Hg2+ in 1980 to 1981 collections from Barnes Hospital, St. Louis, Mo., was only 2% for Staphylococcus aureus and 9% for Escherichia coli. The frequency of Hg2+ resistance in E. coli isolates from Jikei University Hospital, Tokyo, Japan, was 57% during 1972 to 1977 and decreased to 29% in 1979 to 1982; for S. aureus the frequency of Hg2+ resistance dropped from 36% in 1972 to 1977 to 10% in 1979 to 1982. Frequencies of resistances to cadmium (S. aureus) and arsenic (S. aureus and E. coli) remained approximately constant during this time. The decrease in frequency of mercurial resistance is attributed to the termination of the use of organomercurials (largely phenylmercury and thimerosal) in hospital liquid detergents and disinfectants. It is proposed that selection for mercurial resistance occurred within the hospital setting when there was widespread use of mercurials. The resistance patterns and phage types for each of four new mercurial-resistant S. aureus isolates from St. Louis were distinct, indicating that no single type of "hospital staph" predominates. Furthermore, resistance to thimerosal, merbromin, and methylmercury and the ability to volatilize 14C from [14C]methylmercury were found with the new isolates and never with previously known mercurial resistance plasmids in S. aureus.