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Surveillance of oral cultures for Enterobacteriaceae during bone marrow transplantation.

Authors :
Galili D
Tagger N
Sela MN
Garfunkel AA
Source :
European journal of cancer. Part B, Oral oncology [Eur J Cancer B Oral Oncol] 1995 Jan; Vol. 31B (1), pp. 58-62.
Publication Year :
1995

Abstract

Bone marrow-transplanted patients can suffer from severe life-threatening infections. Oral bacterial cultures were collected from a group of 40 patients prior to and following bone marrow transplantation every 3 days, following initial preparation and eradication of oral infections. The samples were grown on the Titertek-Enterobac kit specific for Enterobacteriaceae. In 426 oral cultures 30.5% grew gram-negative bacteria, 76.6% of them were Enterobacteriaceae. young male patients had 8.3% positive cultures at the study start, a percentage which constantly increased during later periods. Older patients did not follow the same pattern. Also, the allogeneic transplantation group had a higher percentage of Enterobacteriaceae than the autologous group (49.0 versus 19.5%). In blood cultures 18 out of the 94 positive ones showed the presence of Enterobacteriaceae. The most commonly found microorganisms in oral cultures were Klebsiella oxytoca (23%), Enterobacter cloacae (18%) and Klebsiella pneumoniae (15%). The decrease in the positive oral cultures from 35.0% during the pretransplantation period to 5.4% close to the transplantation, demonstrates that the preparatory protocol used for the prevention of oral infections was highly effective.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0964-1955
Volume :
31B
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European journal of cancer. Part B, Oral oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
7627090
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/0964-1955(94)00029-4