| Literature DB >> 30777025 |
Oghenekome A Gbinigie1, José M Ordóñez-Mena2, Thomas Fanshawe2, Annette Plüddemann2, Carl J Heneghan2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Older adults with bacterial skin infections may present with atypical symptoms, making diagnosis difficult. There is limited authoritative guidance on how older adults in the community present with bacterial skin infections. To date there have been no systematic reviews assessing the diagnostic value of symptoms and signs in identifying bacterial skin infections in older adults in the community.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial infections; Diagnosis, primary health care; Older adults; Signs and symptoms; Skin infections
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30777025 PMCID: PMC6380032 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-019-1061-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Fig. 1Flow chart showing the process for identification of studies eligible for inclusion
Characteristics of included studies
| Author, year and country | Study type | Study setting | Number of participants | Age (years) | Index tests | Reference Test |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heudorf et al. 2012 | Cross-sectional | Nursing homes | 3732 | 11% under 65 years | Incontinence | Adapted McGeer criteria; physician diagnosis of infection was included as a criterion to avoid under-estimation of the infection rate due to lack of on-site diagnostic testing. |
| Magaziner et al. 1991 USA [ | Cross-sectional | Long term care facilities/Nursing homes | 4259 | > 65 | Incontinence | A combination of symptoms/signs/lab investigations. Not all patients had a bacterial skin culture. |
Fig. 2Risk of bias summary. QUADAS-2 Risk of bias and applicability summary showing review authors’ judgements about each domain for included studies
Fig. 3Risk of bias graph. QUADAS-2 Risk of bias and applicability graph showing review authors’ judgements about each domain across the included studies
Fig. 4Likelihood ratios and probability plot for symptoms and signs in predicting skin infections. Likelihood ratios and pre- and post-test probabilities for symptoms and signs in predicting skin infections. Positive and negative likelihood ratios with 95% confidence intervals are presented for each symptom. The black dot within the dumbbell plot represents the pre-test probability of infection (i.e. prevalence). The red dot represents the probability of infection after a positive test (i.e. given that the symptom is present), and the green dot represents the probability of infection after a negative test (i.e. given that the symptom is absent)