Over a 1-month period, there were five episodes of infusion-related Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteremia in four liver transplantation patients housed in the same ward. Investigation of nursing practices revealed that a common normal-saline bag, to which intravenous (iv) tubing and a stopcock were attached, was used to flush iv catheters. The iv tubing and stopcock were changed at sporadic intervals. Cultures of the normal saline and iv equipment yielded K. pneumoniae, which had the same susceptibility pattern as the patients' isolates. Isolates recovered during the outbreak from the patients and from the iv saline/equipment were of the same strain, as determined by pulsed-field electrophoresis of Xba I-digested genomic DNA. Termination of the practice of flushing iv catheters with a common normal-saline bag halted the outbreak.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/clinids/21.6.1501 | DOI Listing |
Clin Infect Dis
December 1995
Veterans Affairs Medical Center, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15240, USA.
Over a 1-month period, there were five episodes of infusion-related Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteremia in four liver transplantation patients housed in the same ward. Investigation of nursing practices revealed that a common normal-saline bag, to which intravenous (iv) tubing and a stopcock were attached, was used to flush iv catheters. The iv tubing and stopcock were changed at sporadic intervals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThirty-three nosocomial outbreaks of infusion-related septicemia since 1965 have dramatically pointed up the microbiologic hazards of infusion therapy. At least 25,000 patients develop device-related septicemia in the United States each year, but the source of many of these bacteremias is never recognized. Most infusion-related septicemias, including those in hyperalimentation, originate from the device used for vascular access.
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