In 1999-2000, a prospective case-control study of sporadic, domestically acquired campylobacteriosis was conducted in three counties in Norway to identify preventable risk factors and potentially protective factors. A total of 212 cases and 422 population controls matched by age, sex, and geographic area were enrolled. In conditional logistic regression analysis, the following factors were found to be independently associated with an increased risk of Campylobacter infection: drinking undisinfected water, eating at barbecues, eating poultry bought raw, having occupational exposure to animals, and eating undercooked pork. The following factors were independently related to a decreased risk: eating mutton, eating raw fruits or berries, and swimming. Results indicated that infection is more likely to occur as a result of cross-contamination from raw poultry products than because of poultry consumption per se. Drinking undisinfected water, reported by 53% of cases, was a leading risk factor in this study. Drinking water may constitute the common reservoir linking infection in humans and animals, including poultry and wild birds. Insight into the ecology of Campylobacter in freshwater ecosystems may be required to understand the epidemiology of campylobacteriosis. The possibility that certain foods confer protection against campylobacteriosis deserves exploration.
All episodes of bloodstream infection in patients admitted to a Norwegian university hospital in 1974-1979 and in 1988-1989 were analyzed; altogether, there were 1,447 episodes involving 1,286 patients, and 54.3% of all episodes were hospital-acquired. The incidence of bloodstream infection increased between the two periods studied from 4.26/1,000 admissions to 8.71/1,000. Crude mortality rates were 27.6% and 18.8% and attributable mortality rates were 12.3% and 6.9% in the first and second periods, respectively. Patients > 60 years of age accounted for more than half of the bloodstream infections; mortality in this group was significantly higher than that among younger patients (31.4% vs. 13.9%). The frequency of isolation of Enterobacteriaceae decreased from 48% in the first period to 34% in the second, while the rate of isolation of coagulase-negative staphylococci increased from 6.5% to 16.9%. The shift in etiology may be explained in part by the occurrence of significantly more bloodstream infections related to intravascular devices, endocarditis, and skin and wound infections and of significantly fewer episodes related to abdominal or genitourinary disease in the second than in the first period. Almost all isolates of Enterobacteriaceae were susceptible to newer cephalosporins and aminoglycosides. In 1974-1979, 96 (69.1%) of 139 patients with septic shock died; in 1988-1989, the figure was 35 (52.2%) of 67 patients (P = .019). Clinical factors predictive of an adverse outcome were septic shock (odds ratio for first/second period, 12.7/4.6), intensive care treatment (not significant/10.6), malignant disease (4.6/2.6), any underlying disease (4.2/not significant), diabetes mellitus (3.6/not significant), age of> 60 years (not significant/3.0), and pulmonary source of infection (not significant/2.8).
We determined the species distribution and prevalence of ampicillin resistance, high-level gentamicin resistance (HLGR) and vancomycin resistance among clinical enterococcal isolates from five Nordic laboratories (Bergen, Tromsø, Uppsala, Aarhus and Reykjavik). Isolates represented three different groups: (i) all blood culture isolates from 1999; (ii) consecutive in-patient isolates (maximum 40); and (iii) consecutive outpatient isolates (maximum 40) collected during March to May 2000. Antimicrobial use data were collected at the national and hospital level. A high proportion (31.4%) of Enterococcus faecium was detected among blood culture isolates, in contrast to only 4.2% among isolates from outpatients. Ampicillin resistance was not found in Enterococcus faecalis, in contrast to 48.8% in E. faecium isolates. HLGR rates varied considerably between laboratories (1.1-27.6%). Acquired vancomycin resistance was not detected. There were no significant differences in the prevalences of HLGR between in-patient and outpatient isolates at individual hospitals. A cluster of clonally related ampicillin-resistant and HLGR E. faecium isolates was demonstrated in one of the hospitals. The lowest level of hospital antimicrobial use, the lowest proportion of E. faecium and the lowest prevalence of resistance were observed in Reykjavik. The study showed a relatively low level of resistance in enterococci, as compared with most European countries and the USA. However, there were large differences between hospitals with regard to the relative proportion of E. faecium isolates, their susceptibility to ampicillin and gentamicin, as well as the prevalence of HLGR in E. faecalis isolates. This indicates a potential for further improvement of antibiotic policies, and possibly hospital infection control, to maintain the low resistance levels observed in these countries.
Background: Antimicrobial resistance is particularly harmful to infectious disease management in low-income countries since expensive second-line drugs are not readily available. The objective of this study was to implement and evaluate a computerized system for surveillance of antimicrobial resistance at a tertiary hospital in Tanzania.
Objective To study urinary tract complications in and patients with UTI had the highest mean catheterization volume now, and the highest increase in patients treated using long-term clean intermittent catheterization (CIC), and to evaluate the physical mean catheterization volume from 1989 to 1995. Bacteriuria was found in 61% of the urine samples, factors which might be implicated in these complications.with Escherichia coli the dominant species among women and Gram-positive cocci among men. Patients Patients and methods During 1995, 170 patients (84 men and 86 women, mean age 56.9 years) with a who did not use anti-infective agents had a 31% rate of sterile urine while the corresponding value among mean duration of use of CIC for 8.8 years were assessed for complications related to CIC. The same those using antibiotics was 54%. The frequency of catheterization was the only variable predictive of patients had participated in a thorough follow-up study during 1988-9 and were examined again using bacteriuria apart from the use of antibiotics. Conclusion This study confirms previous reports showquestionnaires and the analysis of urine samples. CIC was practised by two-thirds of the patients because ing CIC to be an excellent procedure for minimizing urinary tract complications and supports the current they had neurogenic bladder dysfunction and for nonneurogenic dysfunction in the remainder.recommendations, e.g. restricting the use of antibiotics in patients using CIC and ensuring that they cathResults In this prevalence study, 111 patients (65%) had no signs of clinical urinary tract infection (UTI), eterize sufficiently often to ensure that the mean volume of each catheterization is kept to <400 mL while 10 patients (6%) had pronounced symptoms. The remaining 29% had only minor signs of UTI.in adults. Keywords Clean intermittent catheterization, prevaThere were three predictive factors of clinical UTI; women reported more infections than men, the lence, urinary tract complications, bacteriuria, predicting variables patients most affected by UTI in the present study were those suffering UTI during the 1988-9 studyThe aim of the present study was to re-examine a
The urgent need to treat presumptive bacterial or fungal infections in neutropenic patients has meant that initial therapy is empiric and based on the pathogens most likely to be responsible, and drug resistance. The traditional empirical treatment in Norway has been penicillin G and an aminoglycoside, and this combination has been criticized over recent y. We wished to analyse the microbiological spectrum and susceptibility patterns of pathogens causing bacteraemia in febrile neutropenic patients. This was a prospective multicentre study. During the study period of 2 y, a total of 282 episodes of fever involving 243 neutropenic patients was observed. In 34% of episodes bacteraemia was documented. Overall, 40% of the episodes were caused by Gram-positive organisms, 41% by Gram-negative organisms and 19% were polymicrobial. The most frequently isolated bacteria were Escherichia coli (25.6%), a- and non-haemolytic streptococci (15.6%), coagulase-negative staphylococci (12.4%) and Klebsiella spp. (7.4%). None of the Gram-negative isolates was resistant to gentamicin, meropenem, ceftazidime or ciprofloxacin. Only 5 coagulase-negative staphylococci isolates were resistant to both penicillin G and aminoglycoside. The overall mortality rate was 7%, and 1.2% due to confirmed bacteraemic infection.
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