[The microbiology laboratory in the diagnosis of bacteremia associated with catheters]
- PMID: 10721574
[The microbiology laboratory in the diagnosis of bacteremia associated with catheters]
Abstract
Catheter related sepsis is an outstanding problem in patients in every age group. The microbiological diagnosis should consider the main pathways of infection (catheter-skin interface, endoluminal). With this aim we analysed 1496 central and peripheral short term catheters and 119 episodes of catheter related bacteremia. Catheters were cultured according to the quantitative technique of Brun Buisson (QT), the semiquantitative technique of Maki (SQ) and qualitative broth culture (QL). The following results of sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and Youden index were obtained: SQ = 87%, 88%, 40%, 99%, 0.75; QT (> or = 10(2) CFU/ml) = 88%, 89%, 43%, 99%, 0.77; QT (> or = 10(3) CFU/ml) = 77%, 92%, 48%, 97%, 0.69; QL = 94%, 68%, 20%, 99%, 0.62. Results of SQ and QT > or = 10(2) were comparable, nevertheless, the addition of QT to SQ increased the detection of bacteremia by 12.8%, while in the opposite situation the increase was 10%. According to this, it is advisable to combine routinely SQ and QT. Finally, in 42 episodes of bacteremia related to implanted catheters processed by quantitative differential culture of blood drawn through the catheter and blood drawn through the peripheral vein the relationships were: > 1000 in 79% of cases, between 100 and 1000 in 9% of cases and between 5 and 10 in just 5% of cases.
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