The prevention of nosocomial infection - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

The prevention of nosocomial infection

Description:

The prevention of nosocomial infection - University of Sydney – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:191
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: CSX81
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The prevention of nosocomial infection


1
(No Transcript)
2
Controversies in managing neonatal infections
  • David Isaacs
  • Childrens Hospital at Westmead
  • Sydney Australia

3
Controversies in managing neonatal infections
  • Should I start antibiotics?
  • Should I do a lumbar puncture first?
  • Which antibiotics?
  • Reluctance to stop antibiotics.
  • How can I prevent fungal infections?
  • How can I prevent coagulase negative
    staphylococcal infection?

4
(No Transcript)
5
Should I start antibiotics?
  • Maternal risk factors in early sepsis
  • Clinical examination
  • Laboratory blood count, acute phase reactants
  • If in doubt, start them

6
Should I do a lumbar puncture first?
  • Delayed
  • Respiratory compromise
  • Trauma
  • Cerebral herniation
  • Rare
  • Immediate
  • Biopsy alters treatment in 25 (Ecoli)
  • 15-40 with meningitis have negative blood
    cultures
  • Avoids confusion

7
LP and possible early sepsis
  • Baby with RDS
  • 0.3 have meningitis
  • 1500 LPs to find one meningitis
  • Indications for Selective LP
  • Clinical suspicion
  • Risk factors (greatly prolonged rupture)
  • Wiswell, 1995
  • 169,000 babies Selective LP would mean delay
    or missed diagnosis in 16 of 43 babies (37)

8
LP and late sepsis
  • Traditional data up to 10 of babies with late
    sepsis have meningitis
  • Recent data 50-60 of late sepsis is with
    coagulase negative staphylococci
  • Inclination
  • take blood culture, urine but not CSF (unless
    very sick)
  • start antibiotics
  • LP only if blood growing likely meningitis
    pathogen

9
Which antibiotics?
  • Narrowest spectrum possible
  • Penicillin and gentamicin
  • Flucloxacillin and gentamicin
  • Vancomycin and gentamicin
  • Not third generation cephalosporins
  • Not imipenem or carbapenem

10
(No Transcript)
11
(No Transcript)
12
Antibiotic abuse
  • Paper to review
  • European country
  • Thanksgiving
  • 30 babies treated for Pseudomonas infection
    with ciprofloxacin
  • Used ciprofloxacin because had run out of
    other options
  • Only 4 had sepsis 26 had endotracheal tube
    isolates
  • Treated for 8 to 30 days

13
Antibiotics abuse (cont)
  • Treating colonisation not sepsis
  • Treating for long periods of time
  • Using very broad spectrum (and expensive)
    antibiotics

14
(No Transcript)
15
(No Transcript)
16
Good antibiotic practise
  • Use narrowest spectrum antibiotics possible
  • Treat sepsis, not colonisation
  • Stop antibiotics if cultures negative

17
Reasons given for continuing antibiotics
  • Baby looked sick
  • Acute phase reactants elevated
  • Cultures might be false negatives
  • Cultures unreliable
  • Culture results not back

18
(No Transcript)
19
(No Transcript)
20
Antibiotic use, Oxford 1984-6 (ADC 1987
62 727-8)
  • 1984 1986
  • Mean duration of antibiotics 5.5 days 3.6 days
  • Weight of antibiotics (g) 202.7 122.1
  • treated 50 42
  • Late sepsis 12 16
  • No. after stopping antibiotics 0 0

21
Reasons for stopping antibiotics
  • Baby looked sick
  • Courage, other causes
  • Raised CRP
  • Stop measuring it
  • False negative cultures
  • Rare in late sepsis
  • Results not back
  • Go to the lab and ask

22
(No Transcript)
23
How do I prevent fungal infections?
  • Reduce duration of antibiotics
  • Reduce duration of parenteral feeding
  • Prophylactic antifungals

24
Fluconazole prophylaxis
  • (Kaufman et al, NESM 2001 345 1660-6)
  • 100 babies lt 1000g BW over 30 month period
  • 50 IV fluconazole for 6 weeks
  • 50 placebo

Fluconazole Placebo Colonisation 11
30 Infection (urine, blood, CSF) 0 10
25
Prophylactic oral nystatin
  • Preterm babies, birthweight lt1250g
  • Oral nystatin 1mL (100,000U) 8-hourly until one
    week after extubation.
  • Outcome colonisation (oropharynx, rectum)
  • sepsis (blood, urine)
  • (Sims M et al. Am J Perinatol 1988 533-6)

26
Prophylactic nystatin for low birthweight babies
  • Nystatin Control P
  • (n 33) (n 34)
  • Colonised 4 (14) 15 (44) lt0.01
  • Systemic
  • infection 2 (6) 11 (32) lt0.001
  • UTI 2 (6) 10 (30) lt0.01
  • Pneumonia 0 1 (died)
  • Candidaemia 0 2
  • (Sims ME. 1988)

27
How can we prevent coagulase negative
staphylococcal sepsis?
  • Change question
  • Should we try to prevent CoNS sepsis?

28
(No Transcript)
29
(No Transcript)
30
Coagulase negative staphylococcal neonatal
infection
  • (Australasia 1991 - 2000)
  • 1,281 episodes
  • 57 of late sepsis
  • Meningitis 5 (0.4)
  • Mortality 4 (0.3)

31
Conclusions
  • Antibiotics are an extremely valuable resource
  • Use them wisely
  • Use them sparingly
  • Prevention important
  • Over-vigorous prevention not always wise

32
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com