Selective decontamination of the gastrointestinal tract as an infection control measure |
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Authors: | M. E. Taylor B. A. Oppenheim |
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Affiliation: | Department of Microbiology, Withington Hospital, Manchester. |
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Abstract: | An outbreak caused by a Klebsiella aerogenes resistant to ceftazidime, cefuroxime, cefotaxime, ampicillin and piperacillin and sensitive to aminoglycosides, imipenem and temocillin occurred in a teaching hospital's busy multi-disciplinary Intensive Care Unit over a 3-month period. Four patients had bacteraemia and a further four were colonized. Traditional infection control measures failed to eradicate the outbreak. The introduction of a selective gastrointestinal decontamination regimen consisting of tobramycin, amphotericin and colistin as a gel to the oropharynx, nose and rectum and a suspension via a nasogastric tube resulted in rapid disappearance of the outbreak strain with no new isolates being detected clinically or in surveillance specimens over an 8-week period. |
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Keywords: | Cross infection critical care antibiotics drug resistance |
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