Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America
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Comparative Study
Low serum procalcitonin level accurately predicts the absence of bacteremia in adult patients with acute fever.
The ability of measurement of serum procalcitonin (PCT) levels to differentiate bacteremic from nonbacteremic infectious episodes in patients hospitalized for community-acquired infections was assessed. Serum samples were obtained from adult inpatients with fever to determine the serum PCT level, C-reactive protein (CRP) level, and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR). Of 165 patients, 22 (13%) had bacteremic episodes and 143 (87%) had nonbacteremic episodes. ⋯ Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve was 0.83 for PCT, which was significantly higher than that for CRP (0.68; P<.0001) and ESR (0.65; P<.05). A serum PCT level of <0.4 ng/mL accurately rules out the diagnosis of bacteremia. The use of PCT assessment could help physicians limit the number of blood cultures to be processed and the number of antibiotic prescriptions.
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Prospective laboratory-based surveillance in 4 Finnish hospitals during 1999-2000 identified 1477 cases of nosocomial bloodstream infection (BSI), with an overall rate of 0.8 BSIs per 1000 patient-days. Of BSI cases, 33% were in patients with a hematological malignancy and 15% were in patients with a solid malignancy; 26% were in patients who had undergone surgery preceding infection. Twenty-six percent of BSIs were related to intensive care, and 61% occurred in patients with a central venous catheter. ⋯ Methicillin resistance was detected in 1% of S. aureus isolates and vancomycin resistance in 1% of enterococci. The 7-day case-fatality ratio was 9% and was highest for infections caused by Candida (21%) and enterococci (18%). The overall rate of nosocomial BSIs was similar to rates in England and the United States, but S. aureus, enterococci, and fungi were less common in our study, and the prevalence of antibiotic resistance was lower.
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To determine the diagnostic accuracy of Kernig's sign, Brudzinski's sign, and nuchal rigidity for meningitis, 297 adults with suspected meningitis were prospectively evaluated for the presence of these meningeal signs before lumbar puncture was done. Kernig's sign (sensitivity, 5%; likelihood ratio for a positive test result [LR(+)], 0.97), Brudzinski's sign (sensitivity, 5%; LR(+), 0.97), and nuchal rigidity (sensitivity, 30%; LR(+), 0.94) did not accurately discriminate between patients with meningitis (>/=6 white blood cells [WBCs]/mL of cerebrospinal fluid [CSF]) and patients without meningitis. ⋯ Only for 4 patients with severe meningeal inflammation (>/=1000 WBCs/mL of CSF) did nuchal rigidity show diagnostic value (sensitivity, 100%; negative predictive value, 100%). In the broad spectrum of adults with suspected meningitis, 3 classic meningeal signs did not have diagnostic value; better bedside diagnostic signs are needed.