Literature DB >> 12138980

Skin antisepsis kits containing alcohol and chlorhexidine gluconate or tincture of iodine are associated with low rates of blood culture contamination.

Barbara W Trautner1, Jill E Clarridge, Rabih O Darouiche.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Skin preparation is an important factor in reducing the rate of blood culture contamination. We assessed blood culture contamination rates associated with the use of skin antisepsis kits containing either 2% alcoholic chlorhexidine gluconate or 2% alcoholic tincture of iodine.
DESIGN: Prospective, blinded clinical trial.
SETTING: Tertiary-care teaching hospital. PATIENTS: Adult patients in medical wards, the medical intensive care unit, and the cardiac intensive care unit who needed paired, percutaneous blood cultures.
INTERVENTIONS: House officers, medical students, and healthcare technicians drew the blood for cultures. We prepared sacks containing all of the necessary supplies, including two different types of antiseptic kits. In each sack, one kit contained 2% chlorhexidine in 70% isopropyl alcohol and the other contained 2% tincture of iodine in ethyl alcohol and 70% isopropyl alcohol. Each patient received chlorhexidine at one site and tincture of iodine at the other.
RESULTS: Four (0.9%) of 430 blood culture sets from 215 patients were contaminated. The contamination rate when using alcohol and chlorhexidine (1 of 215, 0.5%) did not differ significantly from the contamination rate when using tincture of iodine (3 of 215, 1.4%; P = .62, McNemar test). There was an 87% probability that the two interventions differed by less than 2% in their rate of contamination.
CONCLUSIONS: Both of these antiseptic kits were highly effective for skin preparation prior to drawing blood for cultures. The use of these kits may have contributed to the low contamination rate observed in this study.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12138980     DOI: 10.1086/502073

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol        ISSN: 0899-823X            Impact factor:   3.254


  8 in total

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Review 2.  Updated review of blood culture contamination.

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3.  Dimethyl sulfoxide enhances effectiveness of skin antiseptics and reduces contamination rates of blood cultures.

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Review 4.  Practical Guidance for Clinical Microbiology Laboratories: A Comprehensive Update on the Problem of Blood Culture Contamination and a Discussion of Methods for Addressing the Problem

Authors:  Gary V Doern; Karen C Carroll; Daniel J Diekema; Kevin W Garey; Mark E Rupp; Melvin P Weinstein; Daniel J Sexton
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Review 5.  Effectiveness of practices to reduce blood culture contamination: a Laboratory Medicine Best Practices systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Susan R Snyder; Alessandra M Favoretto; Rich Ann Baetz; James H Derzon; Bereneice M Madison; Diana Mass; Colleen S Shaw; Christopher D Layfield; Robert H Christenson; Edward B Liebow
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Review 6.  Skin preparation with alcohol versus alcohol followed by any antiseptic for preventing bacteraemia or contamination of blood for transfusion.

Authors:  Joan Webster; Sally E M Bell-Syer; Ruth Foxlee
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7.  Comparison of chlorhexidine and tincture of iodine for skin antisepsis in preparation for blood sample collection.

Authors:  Joan Barenfanger; Cheryl Drake; Jerry Lawhorn; Steven J Verhulst
Journal:  J Clin Microbiol       Date:  2004-05       Impact factor: 5.948

Review 8.  The forgotten role of alcohol: a systematic review and meta-analysis of the clinical efficacy and perceived role of chlorhexidine in skin antisepsis.

Authors:  Matthias Maiwald; Edwin S Y Chan
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-09-05       Impact factor: 3.240

  8 in total

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