Effect of Several Components of Anaerobic Incubation on Antibiotic Susceptibility Test Results

Abstract
The factors influencing the in vitro activity of antibiotics during anaerobic incubation were studied by the disc method with a facultative organism, Escherichia coli . We observed the effects of incubation aerobically, anaerobically (Torbal jars), in a CO 2 incubator, and aerobically and anaerobically with all CO 2 removed. We also monitored p H changes during incubation and observed the effect of two different initial agar p H values (7.4 and 8.3). With aminoglycosides, zones were larger at p H 8.3 and, in each agar p H group, zones were decreased by incubation with increased CO 2 (anaerobically and CO 2 incubator). A fall in agar p H took place during the first 5 to 7 hr of incubation when increased CO 2 was present. Decreased aminoglycoside zones in the presence of increased CO 2 were due to fall in agar p H. Erythromycin showed the same zone size changes as the aminoglycosides. Chloramphenicol zones were somewhat smaller at the lower medium p H. Zones around tetracycline discs were largest after incubation anaerobically. Further aerobic (or CO 2 ) incubation of plates after anaerobic incubation resulted in large “zones of relative inhibition” around the aminoglycoside discs. This suggests that these antibiotics had become more active after exposure to aerobic conditions. Our studies indicate that antibiotic susceptibility test results can be significantly altered by several components of anaerobic incubation including changes in agar p H and CO 2 concentration as well as anaerobiosis per se.