• Intensive care medicine · Aug 1996

    Early and late onset bacteremia have different risk factors in trauma patients.

    • M Antonelli, M L Moro, R R D'Errico, G Conti, M Bufi, and A Gasparetto.
    • Istituto di Anestesiologia e Rianimazione, Università La Sapienza, Policlinico Umberto, Rome, Italy.
    • Intensive Care Med. 1996 Aug 1; 22 (8): 735-41.

    ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to identify risk factors and to describe epidemiological patterns for early-(EOB) and late-onset bacteremias (LOB) after trauma.DesignA prospective study conducted on 141 consecutive trauma patients.SettingA general intensive care unit (ICU) of a university hospital.PatientsAll multiple trauma patients admitted to our general intensive care unit (ICU) from December 1990 to May 1992 were prospectively enrolled in the study. The following information was collected for each patient and recorded in a computer database: demography, severity of trauma according to the Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS), severity of coma according to the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), presence of pneumothorax, pulmonary contusion, rib fractures, hemothorax, and abdominal trauma, use of mechanical ventilation, and placement of central venous catheters. Bacteremias were defined as EOB when onset occurred within 96 h after trauma, and as LOB when appearing after 96 h from trauma.ResultsThirty-seven patients developed bacteremia during their ICU stay (26%): 11 (29.7%) EOB and 26 (70.3%) LOB. Gram-positive cocci were isolated more frequently in EOB than in LOB (chi 2 = 4.1, P = 0.04). The risk of EOB was significantly increased by the presence of pulmonary contusion [relative risk (RR) 15.0; confidence interval (CI) 1.99-113.25], pneumonia before the onset of bacteremia (RR 3.56; CI 1.17-10.69), AIS score greater than 32 and an abdominal injury score greater than 9 (RR 3.11; CI 1.02-9.49), while intravascular catheters and mechanical ventilation did not represent risk factors for EOB. LOB had a very different pattern and their risk was significantly increased by exposure to intravascular catheters (RR 4.96; CI 1.23-19.94) and to mechanical ventilation lasting more than 7 days (RR 3.6; CI 1.6-8.1).ConclusionsScoring with the AIS of the abdominal and thoracic trauma at admission to the ICU appears a useful tool for identifying trauma patients at increased risk of EOB. A rigorous policy of catheter placement and maintenance as a means of reducing late bacteremias in trauma patients is essential.

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