| Literature DB >> 28144131 |
Anna-Karin Gunnarsson1, Lena Gunningberg2, Sune Larsson1, Kenneth B Jonsson1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Urinary tract infection (UTI) is a common complication among patients with hip fractures. Receiving an indwelling urinary catheter is a risk factor for developing UTIs. Treatment of symptomatic UTIs with antibiotics is expensive and can result in the development of antimicrobial resistance. Cranberries are thought to prevent UTI. There is no previous research on this potential effect in patients with hip fracture who receive urinary catheters. AIM: The aim of this study is to investigate whether intake of cranberry juice concentrate pre-operatively decreases the incidence of postoperative UTIs in hip fracture patients that received a urinary catheter.Entities:
Keywords: elderly; hospital; preventive; randomized controlled trial; urinary tract infection; urine culture
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28144131 PMCID: PMC5245868 DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S113597
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Interv Aging ISSN: 1176-9092 Impact factor: 4.458
Figure 1Proportion of patients with positive urine cultures.
Notes: (A) Percentage of all randomized patients with positive urine culture at admittance, five and 14 days postoperative. (B) Percentage of hospital-acquired positive urine cultures in the ITT population at 5 and 14 days postoperatively and at either 5 or 14 days postoperatively. The blue bars represent the placebo-treated patients and the red bars the cranberry-treated patients. The total number of patients in each group is shown above each bar. No significant difference between the groups was found using chi-square test.
Abbreviation: ITT, intention-to-treat.
Figure 2Analysis of patients that had taken >80% of administered capsules.
Notes: Percentage of hospital-acquired positive urine cultures at 5 and 14 days postoperatively and at either 5 or 14 days postoperatively. (A) shows the analysis in the total PP population and (B) shows the result when excluding patients who had taken antibiotics other than the prophylaxis during the study. The blue bars represent the placebo-treated patients and the red bars the cranberry-treated patients. The total number of patients in each group is shown above each bar. No significant difference between the groups was found using chi-square test.
Abbreviation: PP, per-protocol.
Baseline characteristics randomized patients
| Characteristics | Placebo group | n | Cranberry group | n | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age mean (SD) | 82.6 (8.9) | 114 | 83.1 (8.6) | 113 | 0.667 |
| BMI mean (SD) | 24.4 (4.8) | 93 | 23.1 (4.0) | 102 | 0.038 |
| SPMSQ mean(SD)[Md] | 7.59 (3.0) [9] | 91 | 7.26 (3.4) Md 9 | 92 | 0.814 |
| UTI diagnosis last 12 months | 19 | 114 | 26 | 113 | 0.382 |
| Positive culture at arrival | 31 | 103 | 33 | 105 | 0.835 |
| Trochanteric | 52 | 114 | 60 | 113 | 0.739 |
| Cervical | 50 | 114 | 53 | 113 | |
| High temperature | 4 | 114 | 6 | 113 | 0.586 |
| Urgency | 22 | 114 | 21 | 113 | 0.895 |
| Pain passing | 4 | 114 | 7 | 113 | 0.329 |
Notes:
Student’s t-test;
Mann–Whitney U-test;
chi-square test;
12 dropouts before surgery in the placebo group.
Abbreviations: SD, standard deviation; BMI, Body Mass Index; SPMSQ, Short Portable Mental Status Questionnaire; Md, median; UTI, Urinary Tract Infection.