Antibiotic-associated Clostridium difficile diarrhoea may complicate recovery from surgery for proximal femoral fracture. We undertook a four-year case-control study to evaluate a change in antibiotic prophylaxis in our department. During the period January 2003 to January 2005, patients received three doses of prophylactic cefuroxime (1.5g). We then introduced a new regimen, comprising of one single dose of cefuroxime (1.5g) with gentamicin (240mg) at induction. Prior to the change in prophylaxis, 912 patients underwent surgery for neck of femur fracture, and from March 2005 to March 2007, 899 patients had surgery under the new regimen. Thirty-eight patients developed C. difficile infection (4.2%) in the initial group, compared with 14 patients (1.6%) in the group with the new regimen (P=0.009). The incidence of C. difficile infection increased throughout the rest of the hospital over the same time period. Patients with C. difficile infection had a statistically significant increase in antibiotic exposure, inpatient stay, morbidity and inpatient mortality. The main challenges regarding prophylactic antibiotic selection are infection due to meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and C. difficile-associated diarrhoea. We advocate the use of the new regimen as an alternative to multiple-dose cephalosporin antibiotics for the prevention of C. difficile infection in this group of high-risk patients.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhin.2008.05.012 | DOI Listing |
Cureus
December 2024
Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School University Hospital, Newark, USA.
Enteral administration of vancomycin is the standard treatment for () colitis and is presumed to have no systemic absorption. In critically ill patients, however, especially with multi-organ failure, enteral absorption of vancomycin is unpredictable and can cause severe toxicity if it remains unrecognized. We therefore report a case of systemic absorption of enteric vancomycin in a patient with severe colitis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt Microbiol
January 2025
Department of Clinical Laboratory, Zibo Central Hospital, 54 Gongqingtuan West Road, Zhangdian District, Zibo, Shandong, 255000, P.R. China.
Clostridioides difficile has rapidly become a major cause of nosocomial infectious diarrhea worldwide due to the misuse of antibiotics. Our previous study confirmed that RT046/ST35 strain is associated with more severe clinical symptoms compared to RT012/ST54 strain. We conducted genome comparison of the RT046/ST35 and RT012/ST54 strains using whole-genome sequencing technology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: infections (CDI) cause almost 300,000 hospitalizations per year of which ∼15-30% are the result of recurring infections. The prevalence and persistence of CDI in hospital settings has resulted in an extensive collection of clinical isolates and their classification, typically by ribotype. While much of the current literature focuses on one or two prominent ribotypes ( .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Infect Dis
January 2025
Duke University Medical Center, Division of Infectious Diseases, Durham, NC.
Importance: The natural history of C. difficile progression in nucleic acid amplification test (NAAT) positive, toxin enzyme immunoassay-negative patients remains poorly described. Better understanding risk for subsequent disease may improve prevention strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Syst
January 2025
Duchossois Family Institute, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA; Department of Pathology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA; Center for the Physics of Evolving Systems, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA. Electronic address:
The human gut microbiome contains many bacterial strains of the same species ("strain-level variants") that shape microbiome function. The tremendous scale and molecular resolution at which microbial communities are being interrogated motivates addressing how to describe strain-level variants. We introduce the "Spectral Tree"-an inferred tree of relatedness built from patterns of co-evolutionary constraint between greater than 7,000 diverse bacteria.
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