Gram-negative bloodstream infections.

Patricia Muñoz, Ana Fernandez Cruz, Marta Rodríguez-Créixems, Emilio Bouza
Author Information
  1. Patricia Muñoz: Microbiology and Infectious Disease Department, Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón, CIBER de Enfermedades Respiratorias, Universidad Complutense, Madrid, Spain. pmunoz@micro.hggm.es

Abstract

Over the last 22 years we have prospectively recorded data for bloodstream infections (BSIs) in our institution. We reflect the experience of a tertiary teaching hospital with 1750-2500 beds that served a population ranging during the study period from 650,000 to 750,000 inhabitants. Definitions and microbiological methods were standard. The microbiological workload of blood cultures was analysed and the evolution of the incidence of BSI episodes, provided as episodes per 1000 admissions and per 100000 inhabitants, is reported. During the study period, our institution had over one million admissions; blood culturing increased from 299 blood cultures/1000 admissions in the year 1985 to 720/1000 admissions in 2006. Overall, there were 65475 blood cultures with recovery of significant microorganisms, representing 27 419 episodes of significant BSI (22626 patients). The present paper describes the Gram-negative organisms recovered from the blood cultures and discusses their clinical significance.

MeSH Term

Bacteremia
Cross Infection
Gram-Negative Bacteria
Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections
Hospitals
Humans
Incidence
Spain

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0bloodadmissionsculturesepisodesbloodstreaminfectionsinstitutionstudyperiod000inhabitantsmicrobiologicalBSIpersignificantGram-negativelast22yearsprospectivelyrecordeddataBSIsreflectexperiencetertiaryteachinghospital1750-2500bedsservedpopulationranging650750Definitionsmethodsstandardworkloadanalysedevolutionincidenceprovided1000100000reportedonemillionculturingincreased299cultures/1000year1985720/10002006Overall65475recoverymicroorganismsrepresenting2741922626patientspresentpaperdescribesorganismsrecovereddiscussesclinicalsignificance

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