Jpen Parenter Enter
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Jpen Parenter Enter · Mar 1990
Catheter-related complications in 35 children and adolescents with gastrointestinal disease on home parenteral nutrition.
A 7-year experience with home parenteral nutrition (HPN) in 35 children and adolescents suffering from severe gastrointestinal diseases is reported. The average duration of HPN was 577 days with a mean of 2.9 catheters per patients. There was a total of 82 episodes of proven catheter-related sepsis, an average of 1.5 septic episodes per patient year. ⋯ In four cases, clinically significant thrombotic complications occurred. The results suggest that even under optimal conditions of catheter placement and with extensive education in aseptic catheter handling, infection is still relatively common in children receiving HPN. However, there was no mortality related to this complication.
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Jpen Parenter Enter · Mar 1990
Antibiotic therapy of catheter infections in patients receiving home parenteral nutrition.
Fifty-eight episodes of catheter-related sepsis in 21 patients receiving home parenteral nutrition were retrospectively studied. Of 81 organisms isolated from the blood, 59% were Gram-positive cocci, 25% were Gram-negative bacilli, and 16% were yeast. Attempts to treat bacterial infections at home with antibiotic therapy while the catheter remained in place were made; fungal isolation resulted in immediate hospitalization and catheter removal. ⋯ Cefazolin, 1 g, intravenously every 12 hr was successful in only 25% of Gram-negative episodes treated empirically with this regimen. We conclude that our home parenteral nutrition patients should be hospitalized for a few days upon presentation with a catheter infection for clinical evaluation and aggressive antibiotic therapy. Vancomycin is the preferred drug for treatment of catheter-related infections caused by coagulase-negative staphylococcus.