Literature DB >> 9778167

Klebsiella pneumoniae bloodstream infections in neonates in a hospital in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

A A Al-Rabea1, D R Burwen, M A Eldeen, R E Fontaine, F Tenover, W R Jarvis.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify risk factors for Klebsiella pneumoniae bloodstream infections (BSI) in neonates in a hospital in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA).
DESIGN: Two case-control studies among hospitalized neonates during February 15-May 14, 1991, and a procedural and microbiological investigation.
SETTING: Hospital A, a maternity and children's hospital in KSA. PATIENTS: Case patients had a blood culture positive for K pneumoniae after >2 days of hospitalization and had no evidence of a nonblood primary site of infection.
RESULTS: When the 20 case patients were compared with controls, hospitalization in a critical-care unit (odds ratio [OR], 5.5; 95% confidence interval [CI95], 1.20-51.1; P=.03) was identified as a risk factor. When the case patients were compared with a second set of controls matched by critical-care status, receipt of a particular intravenous fluid (D10%/0.2NS; OR, 11.0; CI95, 1.42-85.2; P=.009) or a blood product (OR undefined; P=.04) were identified as risk factors. Infusates were administered via umbilical catheters for most case and control patients (19/20 vs 15/20, P>.05); catheters were manipulated more frequently in patients in critical-care units. Umbilical catheter tip, skin, or mucus membrane K pneumoniae colonization occurred in 47% and 53% of evaluated case and control patients, respectively. Available K pneumoniae isolates from blood cultures and colonization sites had identical antimicrobial susceptibility patterns. Emphasis on handwashing, careful preparation and administration of infusates, and aseptic technique for catheter insertion, maintenance, and manipulation was temporally associated with resolution of the epidemic.
CONCLUSIONS: This outbreak was probably due to infusion therapy practices that led to BSI in nursery patients colonized with K pneumoniae. Both catheter-related infections and extrinsic contamination of infusates may have occurred. Hospital personnel should be aware of their potential to spread nosocomial pathogens from person to person and should implement Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendations to decrease nosocomial BSIs.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9778167     DOI: 10.1086/647897

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


  3 in total

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2.  High frequency of multidrug-resistant gram-negative rods in 2 neonatal intensive care units in the Philippines.

Authors:  Jennifer M Litzow; Christopher J Gill; Jose B V Mantaring; Matthew P Fox; William B MacLeod; Myrna Mendoza; Sookee Mendoza; Rebecca Scobie; Charles W Huskins; Donald A Goldman; David H Hamer
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3.  Neonatal late-onset bloodstream infection: attributable mortality, excess of length of stay and risk factors.

Authors:  C L Pessoa-Silva; C H Miyasaki; M F de Almeida; B I Kopelman; R L Raggio; S B Wey
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 8.082

  3 in total

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