Literature DB >> 16014143

Clinical significance of polymicrobial bacteremia in newborns.

Piyush Gupta1, Ghanshyam D Kumhar, Geetinder Kaur, V G Ramachandran.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify whether polymicrobial bacteremia in newborns is associated with any predisposing factors, distinguishing clinical features, or higher mortality.
METHODS: Results of blood cultures obtained over a period of 1 year from neonates admitted to the paediatric ward and Neonatal Intensive Care Unit of a tertiary care hospital were retrospectively analysed. The study group included all cases with polymicrobial bacteremia (isolation of two or more organisms). Controls (double the number of study cases) were randomly selected from the monomicrobial group. Case records of included cases were retrieved and scrutinized.
RESULTS: Of 770 positive cultures during the study period, 52 (6.8%) cultures were positive for more than one organism. Complete case records were retrieved for 40 polymicrobial and 78 monomicrobial cases. The two groups were comparable for maternal and neonatal parameters including: maternal and obstetric complications; period of gestation; mode of delivery; birthweight and perinatal asphyxia; clinical symptomatology; invasive therapeutic interventions; and mortality.
CONCLUSIONS: Isolation of more than one organism from the blood culture of a suspected septic newborn is not rare. It does not always represent a true invasion by multiple organisms. Polymicrobial isolation per se should not be the criterion for hastily changing the therapeutic decisions.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16014143     DOI: 10.1111/j.1440-1754.2005.00633.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Paediatr Child Health        ISSN: 1034-4810            Impact factor:   1.954


  5 in total

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Authors:  D Leyssene; S Gardes; P Vilquin; J-P Flandrois; G Carret; B Lamy
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2.  Emerging organisms in a tertiary healthcare set up.

Authors:  Inam Danish Khan; Ajay Kumar Sahni; Reena Bharadwaj; Mahima Lall; A K Jindal; V K Sashindran
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3.  Nosocomial infection reduction in VLBW infants with a statewide quality-improvement model.

Authors:  David D Wirtschafter; Richard J Powers; Janet S Pettit; Henry C Lee; W John Boscardin; Mohammad Ahmad Subeh; Jeffrey B Gould
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2011-02-21       Impact factor: 7.124

4.  Polymicrobial bloodstream infection in neonates: microbiology, clinical characteristics, and risk factors.

Authors:  Ming-Horng Tsai; Shih-Ming Chu; Jen-Fu Hsu; Reyin Lien; Hsuan-Rong Huang; Ming-Chou Chiang; Ren-Huei Fu; Chiang-Wen Lee; Yhu-Chering Huang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-01-14       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Polymicrobial bloodstream infections in the neonatal intensive care unit are associated with increased mortality: a case-control study.

Authors:  Mohan Pammi; Danni Zhong; Yvette Johnson; Paula Revell; James Versalovic
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2014-07-14       Impact factor: 3.090

  5 in total

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