1. [Bacteremia due to strict anaerobes].
- Author
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Piña Delgado C, Bolaños Rivero M, Carmona Tello MC, Ramírez Estupiñán CJ, Hernández Cabrera PM, and de Miguel Martínez I
- Abstract
Objective: Anaerobic bacteremia represents 0.5-12% of all bacteremias and its mortality is high, ranging from 25-44%. The aim was to know our data to compare them with existing data and demonstrate the importance of actively searching for these microorganisms in blood culture samples., Methods: A retrospective descriptive study in which the medical records of patients with significant episodes of anaerobic bacteremia were reviewed over a period of 8 years (2014-2022)., Results: A total of 59,898 blood cultures were processed, of which 10,451 were positive (17%). An anaerobic microorganism was identified in 209 patients. Anaerobic bacteremia accounted for 2.11% of the total number of positive blood cultures. The mean age was 63.55 years (17-96), 66% of whom were men. The origin was community in 63.64%, of nosocomial origin in 15.31% and associated with health care in 17.70%. The focus of infection was the abdominal (39.23%), followed by the respiratory (13.88%) and skin and soft tissues (13.39%). The most frequent comorbidities were: arterial hypertension (49.76%), dyslipidemia (29.67%), neoplasia (26.32%) and diabetes (26.32%). The main species isolated were the group Bacteroides spp. (44.50%) (n=93) highlighting Bacteroides group fragilis (n=65), followed by Clostridium spp. (20%) (n=42) highlighting Clostridium perfringens (n=30). The clinical evolution was good in 67.46%. The mean length of stay was 27.8 days and was associated with 20% mortality., Conclusions: Bacteremias due to anaerobes represented 2.11% of the total number of true bacteremias, so we consider the active search for these microorganisms to be appropriate., (©The Author 2024. Published by Sociedad Española de Quimioterapia. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).)
- Published
- 2024
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