The authors conclude that participation in medical research as a medical student may be under-recognised as a determinant of future involvement in clinical research and that the gender disparity of young doctors entering clinical research must be addressed.
Antimicrobial susceptibility patterns of 28 clinical isolates of Flavobacterium sp. were determined by standard disk diffusion technique and by antimicrobial dilution in agar. Rifampin, clindamycin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, cefoxitin, and vancomycin are among the antimicrobial agents which may be clinically useful to treat infections caused by flavobacteria. All 28 isolates were resistant to erythromycin with minimal inhibitory concentrations of 32 ,tg/ml or more.Currently recommended interpretive zones of inhibition by disk diffusion did not reliably predict antimicrobial susceptibility of the 28 flavobacteria isolates when compared with the agar dilution technique, and, therefore, a more direct measurement of minimal inhibitory or bactericidal concentration is recommended.
Seventeen episodes of persistent Staphylococcus epidermidis bacteremia (one to nine days) occurred in 16 patients with vascular catheters during a 26-month period. Cases were statistically more likely to have a longer hospitalization (54 v 7.6 days, p < .0005), longer duration of antibiotic therapy (22 v 2.5 days, p = .002), presence of a central venous pressure (CVP) catheter (14 v 2, p < 3 × 10-8), and presence of an arterial catheter (4 v 1, p = 0.037) than randomly selected hospitalized patients matched for age, sex, and date of admission. However, when cases were compared with similarly matched non-bacteremic patients having CVP catheters, these characteristics were not significantly different in the two groups. Furthermore, exposure to total parenteral nutrition (TPN) and duration of TPN were not significantly different between cases and controls. Hence, the presence of a CVP catheter appeared to be the major risk factor for 5. epidermidis bacteremia. In 16 episodes, patients had temperature > 38.6°C without another identifiable cause, and the average white cell count for the case group was 19,400/mm. Seven patients also had diaphoresis, confusion, hypotension, or oliguria. Temperatures returned to normal in 13 within 24 hours after catheter removal, and all patients were afebrile and symptom-free within 72 hours. Thus, vascular catheter-associated S. epidermidis bacteremia was an important case of febrile morbidity in these patients.
An intern responsible for the care of a patient with chronic cryptosporidiosis developed acute diarrhea and serologic evidence of cryptosporidium infection. Sera from 26 hospital personnel exposed to the patient and 18 personnel with no exposure were examined with an indirect immunofluorescent antibody procedure for the presence of antibodies to Cryptosporidium. Eight (31%) exposed personnel--5 nurses, 2 house officers, and 1 student--had positive antibody titers (1:10 or more). The frequency of positivity in the nurse-housestaff-student group (8 of 18, 45%) was significantly greater (p less than 0.05) than that in the attending physicians and respiratory therapists (0 of 8). The former group had significantly more exposure to the patient's feces than did the latter group (p less than 0.01). Three of eighteen control personnel (17%) had positive cryptosporidium antibody titers. These findings suggest that Cryptosporidium may be transmitted from person to person in the hospital environment and that serologic evidence of infection is common among hospital personnel.
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