The Journal of hospital infection
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Antiseptic vs. saline lavage in purulent and faecal peritonitis.
A prospective randomized trial compared antiseptic solutions and normal saline as a means of preventing morbidity and mortality from residual sepsis in patients with generalized peritonitis. Fifty-three patients, all given broad-spectrum antibiotics, were entered into the study. ⋯ All deaths were due either to the severity of the presenting disease or co-existing complicating conditions. The incidence of postoperative pyrexia, wound infection and duration of hospital stay of the surviving patients were unaffected by lavage grouping.
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Results obtained in two sero-epidemiologic surveys of hospital personnel in Durban were collated to yield information on 423 nurses and 141 domestic staff. The prevalence of antibodies to HBV was 14.9 per cent in 101 white nurses, 52.5 per cent in 322 African nurses and 51.8 per cent in 141 African domestics. This represents a greater than eight times increase for white nurses and a 50 per cent increase for African nurses and domestics over that seen in the equivalent blood donor groups (P less than 0.001 in each case). ⋯ African nurses in adult medical wards showed greatest exposure (57 per cent) closely followed by nurses working in outpatient departments (54 per cent) and as theatre staff (52 per cent). Lower exposure rates (40 per cent) were seen in paediatric and renal unit nurses. This contrasts with results obtained for doctors in the two surveys which indicated that while Indian and white doctors are at significantly higher risk in the African hospital, African doctors are not, and that doctors working in surgical and renal departments are at higher risk than doctors on adult medical wards.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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An outbreak of 12 cases of infection occurred over a 9-month period in a Regional Referral Neonatal Intensive Care Unit. The pathogen was a gentamicin- and multiply-resistant Klebsiella oxytoca (K55), of high virulence. Seven of 10 neonates with septicaemia died, the majority within 24 h of the onset of infection. ⋯ There is evidence to suggest that in one case the infecting organism was acquired from a contaminated blood gas analyser. It is necessary to use incompatibility grouping and restriction endonuclease digestion for complete characterization of plasmids and their molecular weights. However, the finding that each isolate examined carried the same five plasmids as judged by co-electrophoresis on agarose gels, and expressed the same extent and degree of transferable antibiotic resistance provides evidence to suggest that this outbreak was due to spread of a resistant clone of K. oxytoca (K55).
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Comparative Study
An experimental evaluation of antiseptic wound irrigation.
An experimental wound infection model was used to assess the value of four proprietary antiseptics applied topically in preventing the development of wound sepsis. Irrigation of wounds with either saline or noxytiolin 15 min after contamination with Staphylococcus aureus did not reduce either the incidence or degree of infection. ⋯ When irrigation was carried out 45 min before wounds were contaminated, chlorhexidine was the only treatment which reduced the rate of infection (P less than 0.001). It is concluded that the superior activity of chlorhexidine in this model is a good indication that it should be a highly effective agent in the prevention of staphylococcal wound infection, and that this is probably due to a combination of bactericidal and persistent action together with low toxicity.
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In order to identify the possible reservoirs and routes of cross-infection with Pseudomonas aeruginosa, samples from patients, staff, and the environment of a cystic fibrosis centre and two control wards at an infectious disease clinic were collected during a two-week period in 1980. All the Ps. aeruginosa strains were phage and serotyped. Ps. aeruginosa was isolated from 90 (51%) of the cystic fibrosis patients and most belonged to the 0-3/9 complex, characteristic of strains from patients in the centre. ⋯ In contrast, Ps. aeruginosa of the same epidemiological types were only found in a few of the sinks in one of the control wards where a few cystic fibrosis patients were regularly treated in isolation cubicles. The precautions employed to prevent future cross-infection include segregation of Ps. aeruginosa-infected from non-infected patients in separate wards and arranging for visits on separate days in the out-patients clinic. The survival of cystic fibrosis patients treated in the centre is much longer than those treated outside the centre despite the problems of cross-infection.