O'Shea M, Crandon I, Harding H, Donaldson G, Bruce C, Ehikhametalor K
Department of Surgery, Radiology, Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, The University of the West Indies, Kingston 7, Jamaica, West Indies.
West Indian Med J. 2004 Jun;53(3):159-63.
Patients admitted to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) are at risk of developing life-threatening nosocomial infections, especially with organisms resistant to commonly used antibiotics. Neurosurgical patients are particularly vulnerable because of the serious nature of their illness, the frequency of associated trauma and the presence of invasive devices. Of 120 neurosurgical patients admitted to the ICU of the University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI) between September 1995 and December 1999, the records of 73 patients were available for analysis. All had prophylactic antibiotics. Twenty-one of these 73 patients (28.8%) developed 22 infections after a mean of five days in the ICU: nine with chest infection, seven with urinary tract infection, four with central nervous system (CNS) infection and one each with wound and skin infection. This is an incidence of 11.6/1000 patient-days. The responsible organisms included Pseudomonas (7/21), Acinetobacter (3/21), E. coli 2/21, Enterobacter (2/21), and Klebsiella (2/21), and one each with Staphylococcus aureus, methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus, coagulase negative Staphylococcus, group D Streptococcus and bacteroides (1/21). Infection was significantly related to length of hospital stay, length of ICU stay, duration of intubation, duration of ventilation and the presence of diabetes mellitus. All patients who had surgery after ICU admission developed infection, seven with chest infection, two with urinary tract infection, two with CNS and one with skin infection. The three patients who were admitted with intracranial infections all developed other infections. Infected patients had a significantly longer hospital stay. Five patients died, none directly attributable to infection, while 55 (75.5%) made a good recovery. The problem of ICU infection may be expected to escalate with the increased use of intensive care, increasingly more complex surgical procedures and the growing problem of antibiotic resistance. Since infection is related to the length of ICU stay, earlier discharge of neurosurgical patients to an appropriately staffed high dependency unit is likely to result in reduction of the infection rate. Reinforcement of infection control strategies within the ICU may be expected to further minimize the infection rate.
入住重症监护病房(ICU)的患者有发生危及生命的医院感染的风险,尤其是感染对常用抗生素耐药的微生物。神经外科患者因其病情严重、相关创伤频繁以及存在侵入性装置而特别易受感染。在1995年9月至1999年12月期间入住西印度群岛大学医院(UHWI)ICU的120例神经外科患者中,有73例患者的记录可供分析。所有患者均接受了预防性抗生素治疗。这73例患者中有21例(28.8%)在ICU平均住院5天后发生了22次感染:9例发生肺部感染,7例发生尿路感染,4例发生中枢神经系统(CNS)感染,1例发生伤口和皮肤感染。这相当于每1000患者日的感染发生率为11.6。致病微生物包括铜绿假单胞菌(7/21)、不动杆菌(3/21)、大肠杆菌(2/21)、肠杆菌(2/21)和克雷伯菌(2/21),还有1例分别为金黄色葡萄球菌、耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌、凝固酶阴性葡萄球菌、D组链球菌和拟杆菌(1/21)。感染与住院时间、ICU住院时间、插管时间、通气时间以及糖尿病的存在显著相关。所有在入住ICU后进行手术的患者均发生了感染,7例发生肺部感染,2例发生尿路感染,2例发生中枢神经系统感染,1例发生皮肤感染。3例因颅内感染入院的患者均发生了其他感染。感染患者的住院时间明显更长。5例患者死亡,均非直接归因于感染,而55例(75.5%)恢复良好。随着重症监护的使用增加、手术程序日益复杂以及抗生素耐药问题日益严重,ICU感染问题可能会升级。由于感染与ICU住院时间有关,将神经外科患者更早地转至配备适当人员的高依赖病房可能会降低感染率。预计加强ICU内的感染控制策略可进一步降低感染率。