San Antonio Military Medical Center, Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, USA.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol. 2012 Sep;33(9):905-11. doi: 10.1086/667382. Epub 2012 Jul 23.
To determine whether multidrug-resistant (MDR) gram-negative organisms are present in Afghanistan or Iraq soil samples, contaminate standard deployed hospital or modular operating rooms (ORs), or aerosolize during surgical procedures.
Active surveillance.
US military hospitals in the United States, Afghanistan, and Iraq.
Soil samples were collected from sites throughout Afghanistan and Iraq and analyzed for presence of MDR bacteria. Environmental sampling of selected newly established modular and deployed OR high-touch surfaces and equipment was performed to determine the presence of bacterial contamination. Gram-negative bacteria aerosolization during OR surgical procedures was determined by microbiological analysis of settle plate growth.
Subsurface soil sample isolates recovered in Afghanistan and Iraq included various pansusceptible members of Enterobacteriaceae, Vibrio species, Pseudomonas species, Acinetobacter lwoffii, and coagulase-negative Staphylococcus (CNS). OR contamination studies in Afghanistan revealed 1 surface with a Micrococcus luteus. Newly established US-based modular ORs and the colocated fixed-facility ORs revealed no gram-negative bacterial contamination prior to the opening of the modular OR and 5 weeks later. Bacterial aerosolization during surgery in a deployed fixed hospital revealed a mean gram-negative bacteria colony count of 12.8 colony-forming units (CFU)/dm(2)/h (standard deviation [SD], 17.0) during surgeries and 6.5 CFU/dm(2)/h (SD, 7.5; [Formula: see text]) when the OR was not in use.
This study demonstrates no significant gram-negative bacilli colonization of modular and fixed-facility ORs or dirt and no significant aerosolization of these bacilli during surgical procedures. These results lend additional support to the role of nosocomial transmission of MDR pathogens or the colonization of the patient themselves prior to injury.
确定在阿富汗或伊拉克的土壤样本中是否存在多药耐药(MDR)革兰氏阴性菌,这些菌是否污染标准配置的医院或模块化手术室(OR),或在手术过程中雾化。
主动监测。
美国、阿富汗和伊拉克的美国军事医院。
从阿富汗和伊拉克各地采集土壤样本,分析是否存在 MDR 细菌。对选定的新建立的模块化和部署的 OR 高接触表面和设备进行环境采样,以确定细菌污染情况。通过对沉降平板生长的微生物分析来确定 OR 手术过程中革兰氏阴性细菌的雾化情况。
在阿富汗和伊拉克回收的土壤样本分离物包括各种肠杆菌科、弧菌属、假单胞菌属、洛菲不动杆菌和凝固酶阴性葡萄球菌(CNS)易感成员。在阿富汗的 OR 污染研究中,发现 1 个表面有微球菌。新建立的基于美国的模块化 OR 和相邻的固定设施 OR 在模块化 OR 开放之前和 5 周后都没有发现革兰氏阴性细菌污染。在部署的固定医院进行的手术中,细菌雾化的平均革兰氏阴性菌菌落数为 12.8 个菌落形成单位(CFU)/dm2/h(标准差[SD],17.0),而在 OR 不使用时为 6.5 CFU/dm2/h(SD,7.5;[公式:见正文])。
本研究表明,模块化和固定设施 OR 或污垢中没有明显的革兰氏阴性杆菌定植,手术过程中也没有这些杆菌的明显雾化。这些结果进一步支持了医院获得性传播 MDR 病原体或患者受伤前自身定植的作用。