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- Naiel Bisharat and Itamar Minuhin.
- Department of Medicine D, Emek Medical Center, Afula, Israel. bisharat_na@clalit.org.il
- Am. J. Med. Sci. 2012 Dec 1; 344 (6): 431435431-5.
IntroductionProsthetic vascular graft infection (PVGI) is an infrequent and potentially fatal complication of abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery and occlusive vascular disease. The predictive value of blood cultures in accurately identifying the causative pathogen (or pathogens) has not been determined.MethodsWe studied the compatibility between results of blood and graft cultures obtained from patients suffering from late-onset (>4 months after surgery) infections of abdominal prosthetic vascular grafts.ResultsAmong 17 patients who suffered from late-onset abdominal PVGI, only in 3 patients (17.6%), the same microorganisms isolated from blood cultures were also identified by direct cultures from excised grafts or perigraft tissues. Three patients (17.6%) had negative blood cultures and the rest (n = 11; 64.7%) had different growth of microorganisms from the blood and graft cultures. Three patients were diagnosed with chronic Q fever vascular graft infection, all of whom had positive blood cultures. On the basis of graft cultures, Staphylococcus epidermidis and Escherichia coli were responsible for nearly 50% of cases.ConclusionThe yield of blood cultures in late-onset abdominal PVGIs is low. Presence of microorganisms in blood cultures does not necessarily indicate a causal relationship with graft infection. An empirical broad-spectrum antimicrobial therapy is advised in all suspected cases until a definitive etiology has been made.
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