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Query: UMLS:C0004610 (bacteremia)
13,199 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recent reports have documented a decrease in anaerobic bacteremias and have questioned the need for routine anaerobic blood cultures. At the same time, we and others have noted an increase in fungal bloodstream infections. In this two-part study, we first compared recoveries of obligate anaerobic bacteria with those of fungi over a 13-year period and then examined the recoveries of all bacteria and fungi in aerobic and anaerobic blood culture bottles during a 12-month period. During the 13-year period, the number of patients with anaerobic bacteremia remained relatively constant (average, 39 patients per year), while the incidence of fungemia steadily increased, from 12 patients in 1978 to 117 patients in 1990. Of the 1,090 anaerobic isolates, 55.1 and 90.2% were recovered in aerobic and anaerobic bottles, respectively, compared with 98.6 and 37.0% of the 2,582 fungi. During the 12-month period of evaluation, 2,980 bacteria and fungi were recovered in cultures collected from 1,555 patients. Overall, 21.1% more organisms were recovered in aerobic bottles than in anaerobic bottles, including significantly more Staphylococcus species; gram-positive aerobic bacilli; Escherichia, Enterobacter, Pseudomonas, Xanthomonas, and Acinetobacter species; miscellaneous gram-negative bacilli; and yeasts. Only anaerobic gram-negative bacilli and non-spore-forming gram-positive bacilli were isolated more commonly in anaerobic bottles. These data support the concepts that bacteremia caused by obligate anaerobic bacteria is decreasing relative to sepsis caused by other bacteria and fungi and that the routine use of unvented anaerobic blood culture bottles reduces the recovery of common aerobic bloodstream pathogens.
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PMID:Critical assessment of blood culture techniques: analysis of recovery of obligate and facultative anaerobes, strict aerobic bacteria, and fungi in aerobic and anaerobic blood culture bottles. 162 64

Becton Dickinson Diagnostic Instrument Systems (Sparks, Md.) recently introduced BACTEC high-volume aerobic and anaerobic bottles that accept up to 10 ml of blood for use on their nonradiometric blood culture instruments. Both bottles contain 25 ml of tryptic soy broth, 0.05% sodium polyanetholesulfonate, and mixed resins. We compared the anaerobic bottle, designated BACTEC PLUS 27 (BP27), with the Roche Septi-Chek (RSC) Columbia broth anaerobic bottle in a collaborative evaluation at three university hospitals. A total of 5,152 adequately filled blood cultures were obtained from adult patients with suspected bacteremia or fungemia. Staphylococcus aureus was recovered significantly more often (P less than 0.03) from BP27 bottles alone; there were no other significant differences in yield. When microorganisms were recovered from both anaerobic bottles, growth was detected earlier in BP27 than it was in RSC (P less than 0.001), especially for S. aureus (P less than 0.001) and Staphylococcus epidermidis (P less than 0.02). We conclude that the yield from BP27 bottles is equivalent to or better (S. aureus) than that from RSC anaerobic bottles with Columbia broth and that speed of detection is superior with BP27 bottles.
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PMID:Controlled evaluation of BACTEC PLUS 27 and Roche Septi-Chek anaerobic blood culture bottles. 173 69

An immunosuppressed patient is the first to be reported with both histoplasmal fungemia and tuberculous bacteremia, emphasizing the need to consider polymicrobial infection in such patients and the utility of lysis-centrifugation and radiometric blood culture techniques.
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PMID:Concurrent bloodstream infection with Histoplasma capsulatum and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. 195 56

In general, defects in phagocytosis and in humoral or cellular immunity do not appear to predispose to the acquisition of UTI but do influence the clinical manifestations and the severity, microbiology, and complications of infection once it is established. The incidence of UTI in immunosuppressed patients other than diabetics or renal transplant recipients is not higher than the incidence in nonimmunosuppressed individuals. The higher frequencies of infection seen in diabetics and in renal transplant recipients correlate best with the duration of bladder instrumentation rather than with glycosuria or immunosuppressive regimen. Neutropenia blunts the clinical manifestations of UTI and predisposes to bacteremia. Use of broad spectrum antibiotics results in alterations in indigenous flora, promotes urinary infections with resistant nosocomial pathogens, and predisposes to fungemia with hematogenous seeding of the urinary tract. Routine screening for detection of asymptomatic bacteriuria and prompt institution of antimicrobial therapy is indicated only in renal transplant recipients within 3 months of their surgery and not in any of the other diseases discussed.
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PMID:Urinary tract infection in the impaired host. 199 41

A significant increase in the use of vascular access devices has changed the spectrum of organisms causing bacteremia and fungemia at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. This paper documents the 1988 laboratory experience with bacteremia and fungemia and contrasts some of that data with information obtained in 1984. In 1988, 439 tunnelled-catheters and 355 ports were inserted in patients; 2,778 organisms were subsequently recovered from 933 episodes of bacteremia and fungemia. Fifty-percent of the episodes of bacteremia and fungemia were vascular access device-related. Compared to 1984, the relative incidence of bacteremia due to gram-positive organisms increased from 33 to 43%, polymicrobic cultures increased from 24 to 27%, and the number of organisms with colony counts greater than 100 cfu/ml increased from 24 to 44%. In 1988, device-related sepsis was often caused by Acinetobacter spp., Bacillus spp., Corynebacterium spp., pseudomonads other than Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and coagulase-negative staphylococci. Infection was also caused by species of flavobacteria, Micrococcus, and Rhodotorula. Efforts required for identification of many of the newer pathogens have escalated material and personnel costs.
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PMID:Changes in the spectrum of organisms causing bacteremia and fungemia in immunocompromised patients due to venous access devices. 207 97

We prospectively evaluated the infective complications in 279 neutropenic episodes which developed during the treatment of 79 patients with malignant hemopathies over a 35 month period. In 150 episodes (53.73%) infections were detected: one infection in 121 episodes and two in 29 episodes. Overall 179 infections were detected. 75 of them (41.89%) were considered as possible, 57 (31.84%) were microbiologically documented with bacteremia/fungemia 24 (13.40%) were clinically documented, and 23 (12.84%) were microbiologically documented without bacteremia/fungemia. The portal of entry could not be identified in 121 infections (67.59%), 26 (14.76%) originated in the skin and soft tissues, 14 (7.82%) in the lung, 7 (3.91%) in the oropharynx, 5 (2.79%) in a catheter, and 6 (3.33%) were of miscellaneous origin. Of 80 microbiologically documented infections, 39 (48.75%) were due to gram-negative bacteria, 23 (28.75%) to gram-positive bacteria, 12 (15%) to fungi, and 6 (7.5%) to polymicrobial flora. The overall mortality rate was 4.3%. It was 8% for episodes complicated by infection and 0 in episodes of neutropenia without infection.
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PMID:[Infectious complications in neutropenic patients with malignant hemopathies. A prospective study of 279 cases of neutropenia]. 208 24

We report 56 episodes of bacteremia and fungemia in 45 patients (23%) out of overall 193 cases of AIDS. 41% of the isolates were gram-negative bacilli, with a predominance of Salmonella enteritidis (30%), most of them community-acquired. Gram-positive cocci (18 episodes) were hospital-acquired in 61%, with a predominance of Staphylococcus sp (10 cases). Mycobacteria and Cryptococcus neoformans were isolated in 8 patients. 88.8% of our patients with cryptococcosis (8/9) had positive blood cultures. 76% of the episodes (43/56) were community-acquired, with a high incidence of primary bacteremias (59%). 48% of the patients were cured, whereas 27% died from causes related with the bacteremia.
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PMID:[Bacteremia and fungemia in patients with AIDS. Study of 56 episodes]. 209 55

Infection of a central venous thrombus is a serious but rarely recognized complication of the use of central venous catheters in children. We report the cases of seven children with persistent bacteremia or fungemia in which central venous thrombosis was demonstrated by ultrasonography after removal of the catheter. All patients had signs and symptoms of infection, but only one had clinical evidence of central venous stasis. Bacteremia persisted from 6 to 35 days. Infection did not resolve in any patient prior to catheter removal, and five patients had positive blood cultures for 5 or more days after removal of the catheter. Six patients, including all who survived, were treated parenterally with antibiotics for more than 28 days. Two patients died; neither death was directly attributable to infection. Central venous thrombosis should be suspected in patients with persistent catheter-related bacteremia. Optimal treatment of this problem is not yet known.
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PMID:Prolonged bacteremia with catheter-related central venous thrombosis. 219 6

We examined the occurrence of low-grade Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare bacteremia and Cryptococcus neoformans fungemia in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and the consistency of positive cultures obtained using a sensitive blood culture system (Isolator, E. I. Du Pont de Nemours, Wilmington, Del) for the recovery of these organisms. The blood culture records were reviewed, and the proportion of positive blood cultures yielding less than 1 colony-forming unit per milliliter of M avium-intracellulare or C neoformans was calculated. To determine consistency, a period of potentially detectable septicemia was defined as the period between 1 week before the first positive blood culture and the last positive blood culture, providing consecutive positive blood cultures were separated by less than 2 weeks. All positive and negative blood cultures obtained during the period of potentially detectable septicemia were considered in the data analysis. Overall, 40 (16.9%) of 236 cultures positive for M avium-intracellulare and 36 (57.1%) of 63 for C neoformans yielded less than 1 colony-forming unit per milliliter. Mycobacteremia was detected in 52 of 57 periods of potentially detectable septicemia in the first culture and in 56 of 57 in the first two (cumulative detection rates of 91.2% and 98.2%, respectively). Cryptococcemia was detected in 12 of 17 periods of potentially detectable septicemia in the first culture and in 15 of 17 in the first two (cumulative detection rates of 70.6% and 88.2%, respectively). Because of the sensitivity of the blood culture system and the consistency of M avium-intracellulare bacteremia and C neoformans fungemia in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, it appears that two blood cultures are sufficient for the detection of most septic episodes caused by these organisms.
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PMID:Cumulative positivity rates of multiple blood cultures for Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare and Cryptococcus neoformans in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 220 74

Three cases of two fungal agents causing simultaneous systemic infection in immunocompromised pediatric patients are presented and the literature is reviewed. All three patients had several underlying factors that predispose to systemic fungal infections. A species of candida was identified initially as an etiologic agent in all of the three patients causing subcutaneous abscesses, urinary tract infections, fungemia, catheter exit site infection, or pneumonia. However, a few days later blood cultures grew aspergillus species in two of the three patients; in the third patient aspergillus was identified on microscopic examination of the spleen. All three patients had an associated bacteremia with either Staphylococcus aureus or S. epidermidis requiring vancomycin therapy. Presence of aspergillus infection required treatment with amphotericin. Difficulties in making a definitive diagnosis of systemic fungal disease may explain paucity of reports in the literature with simultaneous polyfungal systemic infection.
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PMID:Polyfungal systemic infections in pediatric oncology patients. 224 Apr 81


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