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Critical care medicine · Nov 1992
Bacterial and fungal colonization of endotracheal tubes in children: a prospective study.
- J S Rubenstein, K Kabat, S T Shulman, and R Yogev.
- Division of Pediatric Critical Care, Northwestern University Medical School, Chicago, IL.
- Crit. Care Med. 1992 Nov 1;20(11):1544-9.
ObjectivesTo evaluate both the frequency and route of endotracheal colonization of intubated children by pathogens and to assess the usefulness of Pediatric Risk of Mortality scoring and measurement of gastric pH in predicting this colonization.DesignProspective data collection.SettingA multidisciplinary pediatric ICU.PatientsNineteen children with medical/surgical problems who were intubated for at least 4 days.InterventionsBuccal mucosa, and endotracheal and gastric aspirates were cultured for pathogens immediately after endotracheal intubation and daily for 4 to 5 days. Pediatric Risk of Mortality scores were calculated at the time of endotracheal intubation; gastric pH was measured each time that the cultures were obtained.Measurements And Main ResultsThe buccal mucosae of ten (53%) of 19 children were colonized with Candida species at the time of endotracheal intubation. This colonization correlated with the degree of physiologic instability as measured by Pediatric Risk of Mortality scores (12.9 +/- 2.8 SEM for those patients colonized vs. 4.9 +/- 1.0 for those patients not colonized; p = .01), but not with preintubation antibiotic therapy. Eleven (58%) children acquired 27 endotracheal pathogens after the day of intubation. The buccal mucosa was the initial site of colonization of 19 (70%) of 27 of the acquired pathogens. A gastric pH of > 3.0 at the time of intubation correctly predicted colonization in nine of 11 children (p < .025, Fisher's exact test); a Pediatric Risk of Mortality score of > 8 at the time of endotracheal intubation correctly predicted colonization in eight of 11 patients (p < .05, Fisher's exact test).ConclusionsColonization of the buccal mucosa appears to be the crucial antecedent to endotracheal colonization in children. In children, gastric pH and Pediatric Risk of Mortality scores at the time of endotracheal intubation can predict pathogenic endotracheal colonization within 4 days of intubation. Selective decontamination regimes may be appropriate for these patients, especially those regimes that are directed to the buccal mucosa.
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