Post on 12-Jan-2016
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• A 38 y/o G3P3 diabetic delivered by Caesarian section due to a big baby. She was non-ambulatory and on indwelling catheter on the first 24 hours post operation.
• On the 3rd H.D she experienced fever and chills. Post operative wound was clean.
• CBC revealed leucocytosis with predominance of neutrophils and urinalysis with marked pyuria.
Salient Features
• 38 y/o pregnant diabetic female• G3P3 • Delivered big baby thru caesarean• Non-ambulatory • With indwelling catheter• Post-op wound was clean• On 3rd day of H.D.: fever and chills• CBC: leukocytosis (↑neutrophils)• Urinalysis: Pyuria
Urinary tract infection (UTI)
• Characterized by BACTERIURIA and PYURIA
• May be symptomatic or asymptomatic
• May affect the kidneys (pyelonephritis) or the bladder (cystitis)
Etiology
• More than 85% - caused by Gram (-) bacilli that are normal inhabitants of the intestinal tract
• Most common: Escherichia coli• Other causes: Proteus
Klebsiella
Enterobacter
Streptococcus faecalis
Risk factors
• Indwelling catheterization– The daily risk of bacteriuria with catheterization is
3% to 10%, approaching 100% after 30 days
• Other risk factors: female sex, diabetes mellitus, older age, impaired immunity, and lack of antimicrobial exposure
2 ROUTES
• HEMATOGENOUS
- through the bloodstream
• ASCENDING
- from the lower urinary tract
PATHOGENESIS
PATHOGENESIS
• HEMATOGENOUS INFECTION
- less common
- results from seeding of the kidneys by bacteria from distant foci in the course of septicemia or infective endocarditis
• ASCENDING INFECTION
1. Colonization of the distal urethra and introitus
( in the female) by coliforms
2. From the urethra to the bladder –urethral catheterization
3. Urinary tract obstruction and stasis of urine
4. Vesicoureteral reflux
5. Intrarenal reflux
PATHOGENESIS
Nosocomial infections
• Infections which are a result of treatment in a hospital but not secondary to the patient's original condition.
• Appear 48 hours or more after hospital admission or within 30 days after discharge
Nosocomial Infections
• Four most common types of nosocomial infections are:1. UTI2. SSI3. Nosocomial Pneumonia4. Nosocomial Bacteremia
Urinary Tract Infection
• 80% associated with the use of indwelling catheters
• Associated with less morbidity– Gram-negative enterics, 50%– Fungi, 25%– Enterococci, 10%
Surgical Site Infection• Are also frequent – 15%
• Presence of purulent discharge around the wound or the insertion site of a drain or –
• Presence of cellulites which is emanating from the wound
• Patients acquire infection either endogenously or exogenously
• Contamination varies with the length of the procedure and the health condition of the patient
– Staphylococcus aureus, 20%– Pseudomonads, 16%
Nosocomial Pneumonia
• About 3% of patients on ventilators acquire pneumonia
• The source is often endogenous but may also be exogenous with transfer of an organism from the respiratory equipment
Risk factors
– mechanical ventilation (high risk), – elderly,– neonates, – severe underlying disease, – immunodeficiency, – depressed sensorium, – cardiopulmonary disease, – recent thoraco-abdominal surgery
Pathogens infecting the Respiratory tract
• Bacterial pneumonia• Legionnaires' disease• Pulmonary aspergillosis• Mycobacterium tuberculosis• Viral pneumonias
– Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV)– Influenza
Nosocomial Bacteremia• About 5% of nosocomial infections• may occur at the entry site of the intravascular
device• sources of infection-causing microorganism for these
infections are endogenous– Coagulase-negative staphylococci, 40%– Enterococci, 11.2%– Fungi, 9.65%– Staphylococcus aureus, 9.3%– Enterobacter species, 6.2%– Pseudomonads, 4.9%
Prevention
• Place bladder catheters only when absolutely needed (e.g. to relieve obstruction).
• Use aseptic technique.• Minimize manipulation or opening of drainage systems.• Remove bladder catheters as soon as is feasible.• Healthcare providers clean their hands by washing them
with soap and water or using an alcohol-based hand rub before and after touching the catheter.
• Avoid disconnecting the catheter and drain tube. This helps to prevent germs from getting into the catheter tube.
• The catheter is secured to the leg to prevent pulling on the catheter.
• Avoid twisting or kinking the catheter. • Keep the bag lower than the bladder to prevent urine
from backflowing to the bladder. • Empty the bag regularly. The drainage spout should
not touch any thing while emptying the bag
6. WHAT ARE OTHER ORGANISMS THAT CAUSE PULMONARY, GASTROINTESTINAL AND POST SURGICAL WOUND INFECTIONS?
Microorganism Infections caused
Staphylococcus aureus, Coagulase negative Staphylococci, Enterococci
Surgical wound infections, Pneumonia, Septicemia, Urinary Tract Infections
Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Enterobacter spp. And Klebsiella Pnemoniae
Pneumonia and surgical wound infections
Clostridium difficile Causes nearly half of nosocomial diarrhea
Candida Albicans Urinary tract infections and Septicemia
Acinetobacter, Citrobacter, Haemophilus
Urinary tract infections and surgical wound infections
Hospital acquired: Pulmonary
Pseudomonas aeruginosa – most common MDR Gram-negative bacterium
causing Ventilator-associated pneumonia
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus– is an increasing cause of VAP
Hospital acquired: Gastrointestinal
Clostridium difficile– Causes pseudomembranous colitis
• offensive-smelling diarrhea, fever, and abdominal pain• life-threatening complications can develop
– Ex: Toxic megacolon
– Clindamycin• causes the alteration of the normal bacterial flora of
the bowel
Hospital acquired: Surgical wound
Most common causes of surgical site infection:• Staphylococcus aureus - wounds and incisions• Staphylococcus epidermidis - nosocomial
bacteremia• Bacteroides fragilis - anaerobic isolate from
surgical infection