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Query: UMLS:C0004610 (
bacteremia
)
13,199
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Serratia marcescens rarely causes infections in newborn infants. We recently studied an epidemic caused by a multiply-resistant, serotype 014:H12 Serratia marcescens that involved 42 infants. Cutaneous abscesses at previous intravenous infusion sites occurred nine times, usually required surgical drainage, and were the most striking infections during the outbreak. Six infants developed
Serratia bacteremia
and two died with Serratia meningitis; 34 patients were colonized with Serratia but remained uninfected. An epidemiologic investigation of the 83 infants at risk in the nursery assessed factors predisposing them to colonization or infection with the epidemic organism. Colonization of the throat, umbilicus, gastrointestinal tract, or skin was frequent among infants as was carriage of Serratia on nursey employees' hands. Infected and colonized infants were the most important reservoir for Serratia in the nursery and cross-infection between infants readily occurred. Scalp-vein needles appeared to provide a portal of entry of Serratia in colonized infants, predisposing them to abscess formation and
bacteremia
.
...
PMID:A nursery outbreak caused by Serratia marcescens--scalp-vein needles as a portal of entry. 77 70
A 7 and one-half yr-old girl developed
bacteremia
from S. marcescens following debanding of the pulmonary artery and closure of multiple ventricular septal defects with a Dacron patch and multiple Teflon pledgets. The site of entry was probably a radial arterial catheter left in place for 8 days. Infection was eradicated by a combination of gentamicin and carbenicillin over a 4-wk period. Of 12 cases of postoperative
Serratia bacteremia
in adults following valve replacement, only four survived. Antibiotics of proven effectiveness against the specific isolated Serratia strain, prompt therapy sustained for 6 wk offers the prospect for cure of this serious complication of cardiac surgery.
...
PMID:First reported successful management of Serratia marcescens bacteremia after open heart surgery in a child. 110
During a 6-yr period, 146 patients at our institution had
Serratia bacteremia
(3.8% of the total number of episodes of
bacteremia
), with an incidence of 1.24/1000 admitted patients. We chose a random group of 50 cases for clinical analysis in the present study. The disease was community-acquired in 8% of the cases and nosocomially-acquired in the remaining 92%. The
bacteremia
was unimicrobial in 84% and part of a polymicrobial
bacteremia
in 16% of the episodes. The most frequently isolated species of the Serratia genus was S. marcescens. Portals of entry, in decreasing order of frequency, were: urinary, unknown, respiratory, and surgical wound infections. Clinically, the most frequent finding was fever (100%). Shock occurred in 28% of the patients, and none of our cases showed evidence of disseminated intravascular coagulation. We found 62% of Serratia isolates resistant to gentamicin. Overall mortality was 38% and factors associated with a poor prognosis were: severity of the underlying disease, critical clinical situation at onset of
bacteremia
, presence in the intensive care unit (I.C.U.), occurrence of shock or polymicrobial
bacteremia
, portal of entry in the respiratory tract, and inadequate treatment.
...
PMID:Serratia bacteremia. 367 74
Ceftazidime has broad antibacterial activity against many gram-positive and most clinically significant nosocomial gram-negative bacillary pathogens. Many studies have been undertaken both in this country and in western Europe to determine the clinical effectiveness of ceftazidime in seriously ill patients. Differentiating between nosocomial and community-acquired infections is difficult in many reports, but high cure rates, usually exceeding 80 percent, have been reported for documented gram-negative bacillary infections. In non-neutropenic patients, response rates have also been in a comparable range. Particularly impressive have been the high cure rates in Pseudomonas aeruginosa
bacteremia
complicating burns and other gram-negative bacteremias in patients with underlying diseases. In comparative studies carried out in seriously ill or neutropenic patients, the results with ceftazidime have not significantly differed from those obtained with regimens that included beta-lactam agents paired with aminoglycosides. Some problem areas persist in these studies: the interpretation of comparative studies in which a large number of cases were eliminated because of "unevaluability," superinfections due to gram-positive organisms that may require or necessitate addition of agents like vancomycin, and the emergence of resistance as seen in three groups of organisms--Pseudomonas, Serratia, and Enterobacter species. Nonetheless, summary data from cases treated in the United States indicate cure and/or improvement in 100 percent of 14 cases of
Serratia bacteremia
, 83 percent of 12 cases of Enterobacter sepsis, 82 percent of 22 cases of Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia, and 85 percent in 27 cases of P. aeruginosa
bacteremia
. Only 11 of 86 cases of
bacteremia
due to the organisms just cited were judged unevaluable. Three of the four failures in the treatment of Pseudomonas
bacteremia
occurred in neutropenic patients. More definitive information on the relative efficacy of ceftazidime in controlled trials, particularly in granulocytopenic patients, may result from more careful analysis of survivorship using methods that do not eliminate "unevaluable cases." Techniques for this type of analysis have already been implemented in some studies.
...
PMID:Ceftazidime in the treatment of nosocomial sepsis. 389 24
Between October 20 and November 11, 1997, Serratia marcescens
bacteremia
was identified in 8 patients in a pediatric ward at Siriraj Hospital. The organism was isolated from 17 blood and 3 bone marrow specimens. The only common associated factor in these patients was that they all had received an intravenous fluid infusion. In the attempt to investigate the source of S. marcescens implicated in the outbreak, 108 specimens of intravenous fluid, 3 intravenous fluid bottle caps, 4 specimens from intravenous fluid tubing sets, 21 specimens of antiseptics used on the ward, 28 specimens of rectal swabs from patients on the ward, 1 sample of blood culture media prepared by the hospital for routine use, and 62 environmental specimens including hand swabs of the medical personnel, refrigerator, air conditioning, milk samples, room air, water sink, wooden splint and adhesive tape used to immobilize the intravenous access. Of 227 specimens sent for culture, S. marcescens was isolated from only one specimen collected from the in-use intravenous fluid given to a patient with
Serratia bacteremia
. S. marcescens was not found in any other surveillance culture. The 8 patients were placed under quarantine in the same room with an exclusive nursing team. With the investigation and intervention including monitoring for meticulous hand washing of the ward staff, the outbreak was stopped within 7 days. Although the investigation failed to discover the environmental reservoir of S. marcescens in this outbreak, the data suggested that intravenous fluid was probably the route of transmission and the medical personnel played an important role in spreading the infection.
...
PMID:The outbreak of Serratia marcescens bacteremia in a pediatric ward, Siriraj Hospital 1997. 1240 46
Annual implants of cardiovascular implantable devices (CIEDs) are increasing, thus increasing the risk of device exposure. This case presents CIED management issues following traumatic thermal injury. A 59-year-old female presented to intensive care with 42% total body surface area burn involving tissue over her pacemaker generator. Electrophysiologists interrogated and reprogrammed the pacer and observed the patient over 72 hours without pacing.
Serratia bacteremia
developed and cardiology recommended device removal. The pacemaker generator and leads were removed by cardiothoracic and burn surgery. Postoperatively, asystole required emergency transvenous pacing wire placement. During
bacteremia
treatment, cardiology planned to pace with an active-fixation screw-in lead with long-term plans to place a single right ventricular chamber leadless pacemaker because of the extensive burns. The patient developed fungemia and the family opted for comfort care. This case report discusses the management of a CIED exposed after a traumatic thermal burn, including device extraction.
...
PMID:Management of exposed pacemaker caused by burns. 3111 Nov