Title: Antibiotic Choices for Infections which Require Hospitalization
1Antibiotic Choices for Infections which Require
Hospitalization
- Rodolfo E. Bégué, MD
- Chief, Infectious Diseases
- Pediatrics, LSUHSC
- rbegue_at_lsuhsc.edu
2Infections which require hospitalization
- Examplesr/o sepsismeningitis /
encephalitisbrain abscess / orbital
cellulitispneumonia / endocarditisacute
abdomenurinary tract infection bone
jointskin skin structures
3Fever ? r/o sepsis
- Hyperthermia or hypothermia
- Tachycardia
- Tachypnea
- Leukocytosis or leukopenia
- Toxicity clinical picture - lethargy -
hypoperfusion - hypoventilation,
hyperventilation or cyanosis.
4Sepsis work-up
- Cell Blood Count (CBC) ? Blood Culture
- Urine analysis ? Urine Culture
- Chest roentgenogram
- Stool
- NPA
- Lumbar puncture ? CSF Culture
- (CRP, Procalcitonin)
5Etiologies of Sepsis
- lt 1 month of age
- Group B Streptococcus
- Escherichia coli
- (Listeria monocytogenes)
- 1-3 months of age
- Streptococcus pneumoniae (?)
- Group B Streptococcus
- Neisseria meningitidis
- Salmonella spp
- (Haemophilus influenzae b)
- (Listeria monocytogenes)
- 3-36 months of age
- Streptococcus pneumoniae (?)
- Neisseria meningitidis
- (Haemophilus influenzae b)
6Antibiotics for a child with r/o Sepsis
- Empiric Antibiotic Treatmentlt 1
month Ampicillin Gentamicin Ampicillin
Cefotaxime1-3 months Ampicillin
Cefotaximegt 3 months Cefotaxime - (Vancomycin?)x 7-14 days
7Is it a contaminant?
- 1 vs gt2 positive culture
- Pathogen vs no pathogen
- Symptoms vs no symptoms
- Timing (lt 24 h vs gt 24 h)
- Plate vs broth (thio)
8Central Line Infection
- Central Peripheral Blood Culture
- Gram-positive, Gram-negative, Fungi
- If possible, change line(Staph, Enteroc, GN,
Fungi, Mycobact) - vs treat through line
- If line out 1 weekIf line in 2 weeks
- Antibiotic lock
9Bacterial Meningitis
- Diagnosis LP, LP, LP
- Should I do an LP?
- Increased intracranial pressure
- Prior antibiotics
- Bloody tap
10Bacterial Meningitis Treatment
- Neonate AmpGent / AmpCefotax
- Older child cefotaxime plus vancomycin
- Modify according to susceptibilities penicillin
cefotaxime vancomycin plus cefotaxime - Corticosteroids (?)
- Rifampin (?)
11Aseptic Meningitis
- Viral (enterovirus vs others)
- Partially treated
- Other causes only on special populations
12Encephalitis
- Not bacterial
- HSV Enterovirus Arbovirus (WNV) EBV, CMV, etc
- ADEM
13HSV Encephalitis
- Acyclovir60 mg/kg/d div q 8 hr750 mg/m2/d div
q 8 hrx 21 days IV
14Brain abscess
- Source
- Proximity middle ear, sinuses
- Meningitis
- Hematogenous
- Penetrating wound, surgery
15Brain abscess
- Triad
- Headache
- Focal neurologic findings
- Fever
- Treatment
- Surgery
- Antibiotics Cefotax Vanco (Metro)
- for 4-8 weeks (IV)
16Orbital Cellulitis
- Triad
- Proptosis
- Decreased eye movement
- Pain on eye movement
17Orbital Cellulitis
- Treatment
- AntibioticsCefotax Vanco (Metro) Cefotax
Clindax 10-14 d IV and 7-14 d PO - Surgery (ORL, Ophthalmology)
18HSV Keratitis
- Management
- With an ophthalmologist
- antivirals 1-2 trifluridine1
iododeoxyuridine3 vidarabinex 14-21 days - topical corticosteroids contraindicated
- No need for systemic acyclovir
19Pneumonia
- TB
- ChlamydiaMycoplasma
- Fungal
- ViralInfluenza, RSV
- BacterialStreptococcus pneumoStaph aureusGroup
A Streptococcus
20Empiric Treatment for Pneumonia
- If sick enough to require admission (assuming
viral panel negative), the regular r/o sepsis
regimen is usually OK - Ampi genta / Ampi cefotax / Cefotax
- Usually add a macrolide (erythro or azithro)
- Add Vancomycin if VERY sick or necrotizing
- Others (TB, Gram-negative, PCP, fungal) only if a
good reason to suspect
21Endocarditis
- Acute ? Staph (MRSA)
- Subacute ? viridans Strept
- Antibiotics Vanco gentamicin Penicillin
gentamicin - X 2 w, 4-6 w
- Surgery (?)
22Pericarditis
- Purulent pericarditis
- Strept PneumoStaph aureus (MRSA)
- Antibiotics Ceftriaxone Vancomycin
- X 4 weeks
- Surgery (?)
23Acute Abdomen
- Diagnosis
- Clinical
- Imaging (XR, US, CT)
- Treatment
- Surgery
- Antibiotics
Mild-moderate Severe
Ampi/sulb, Ticar/clav Piperac/Tazobactam Imipenem, Meropenem, Ertapenem
Cefazolin or cefuroxime metronidazole Cefotax, ceftriax, ceftaz, cefepime metronidazole
Ampi genta (Tobra) Metronidazole (Clinda) Cipro, levoflox, gatiflox Metronidazole Aztreonam Metronidazole
For 5-7 days
IDSA. CID 201050133-64
PO Cipro/Metro or Amox/Clav x 14-21 d
24Urinary Tract Infection
- Etiology
- Escherichia coli
- Enterococcus
- Always suspect in febrile children lt 2 yrs of age
- Dx of UTI requires a UCx (bag-specimen not good)
- UA (WBC), dipstick OK as a guide, especially in
combination - Gram stain (unspun urine)
25Urinary Tract Infection
- Follow-up
- US, VCUG
- DMSA scan
- Consider prophylaxis
- Inpatient Treatment
- Cefotaxime or Ceftriaxone
- Ampicillin gentamicin
26Osteomyelitis
- Staph aureus
- (Others in especial populations)
- ClindamycinVancomycinLinezolid
- X 4 weeks (IV/PO)
- Surgery
27Septic arthritis
- Fever, joint pain/swelling, decreased ROM
- Diagnosis clinical, XR (hip), US,
arthrocentesis, CT (SI)
28Septic arthritis
- Treatment
- Aspirate vs Surgery hips, shoulders
- AntibioticsVancomycin (Clinda, Oxacillin)
cefotaxime (cefuroxime) - x 3 weeks (IV/PO)
- Etiologies
- Staph aureus
- Streptococcus (GAS, Strept pneumo)
- Kingella kingaeSalmonella
- Neisseria (GC, N. meningitidis)
- (H. influenzae)
29Puncture wounds (foot)
- Etiology
- Staph aureus ( 3 d)
- Pseudom spp ( 7 d)
- Mycobacteria ( 2-4 w)
- Treatment
- Wound careTetanus vaccineAnti-Staph antibiotics
- If no responseSurgical exploration ?
cultureCeftazidime ? ciprofloxacin (for 2 w)
30Skin and Soft Tissue
- EtiologyGroup A Streptococcus Staphylococcus
aureus (MRSA)(Strep pneumo / Hib) - TreatmentVancomycin or Clindamycinadd
rifampin?linezolid?? - Drain any abscess
31Any Question?