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Antibiotic Resistance Methodology
Publication Date: February 2003
Citing URL: http://esi-topics.com/anti-res

Antibiotic Resistance

The baseline time span for this database is 1992-2002. The resulting database contained 5,567 papers; 14,550 authors; 117 countries; 963 journals; and 3,494 institutions. Read the methodology used to create this special topic.
M
Top Papers
Top 20 papers overall
1991-1999
Top Authors
Top 20 overall
1991-1999
Top Institutions
Top 20 overall
1991-1999
Top Nations
Top 20 overall
1991-1999
Top Journals
Top 20 overall
1991-1999
Time Series
1 year
5 year
Field Representation, Distribution
Field representation
1991-1999
Editorial
Read interviews and first-person essays about people in a wide variety of fields, and information on journals in the topic of Antibiotic Resistance.
March 2003
Peter C. Appelbaum, M.D., Ph.D.
February 2003
Robert F. Breiman, M.D.
E
N
U

Overview

The development of antibiotic resistance as a consequence of chromosomal changes within a bacterial organism as well as widespread use of particular antibiotic agents is a growing concern in the health care community. Special Topics has examined the literature from the past decade to spot trends in antibiotic-resistance research. The top 20 papers in this field cover a wide variety of topics, including data on resistance rates, tests of various treatment regimens, the mechanics of resistance on a genetic level, and methods for typing clinical isolates for study. Treatment regimens reported here include bismuth in combination with metronidazole and tetracycline for Helicobacter pylori infections, and penicillin or cephalosporin for pneumococcal pneumonia. Resistance trends data show statistically significant increases—in some studies 40%—in antimicrobial resistance throughout the global community. Suggestions to detect, report, and prevent further inroads into antibiotic resistance are discussed, including antibiotic control programs and better hygienic practices. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus is discussed in particular, as are the mutation frequencies of Escherichia coli and Salmonella. Rounding out the top 20 are studies detailing the use of vectors in gene replacement experiments to manipulate antibiotic resistance.

Methodology

To construct this database, papers were extracted based on title- and author-supplied keywords for Antibiotic Resistance. The keywords used were as follows:
    
antibiotic resistance*
     or
    
antibiotic-resistance*

The baseline time span for this database is 1992-2002. The resulting database contained 5,567 papers; 14,550 authors; 117 countries; 963 journals; and 3,494 institutions.

Rankings

Once the database was in place, it was used to generate the lists of top 20 papers, authors, journals, institutions, and nations, covering a time span of 1992-2002.

The top 20 papers are ranked according to total cites. Rankings for author, journal, institution, and country are listed in three ways: according to total cites, total papers, and total cites/paper. The paper thresholds used to determine scientist, institution, country, and journal rankings according to total cites/paper were as follows: 32, 26, 25, and 30, respectively.

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