Between 1976 and 1982, Enterobacteriaceae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa were prospectively counted in fecal specimens from leukemic patients with gram-negative bacteremia. The strains isolated from the blood and feces of 55 patients were compared. Translocation of the dominant fecal strain of Enterobacteriaceae or P. aeruginosa was observed in 45 cases (82%) and was strongly associated with granulocytopenia of less than 10(2) cells/microliter (P less than .0001). Thirteen (81%) of 16 patients with bacteremia caused by P. aeruginosa were intestinal carriers of the same strain, whereas only 2 (5%) of 39 patients with bacteremia caused by Enterobacteriaceae were carriers of P. aeruginosa. Bacterial translocation of Enterobacteriaceae was not associated with an abnormally high fecal population of the translocating strain. Prospective quantitative and qualitative analyses of fecal flora were useful in forecasting the most probable translocating gram-negative organism in neutropenic leukemic patients with clinical signs of bacteremia.
In a randomised double-blind trial conducted between 1990 and 1994, 616 patients from 43 centres, pefloxacin (group P, 316 patients) and a cefazolinoxacillin combination (group C, 300 patients) were compared in the prophylaxis of bone infection after grade 1 and 2 open leg fractures. Samples were obtained at emergency, before and during surgery, and from drain aspirates. Antimicrobial susceptibility, slime production and adherence properties of the bacteria were tested. Cultures at emergency and before surgery showed similar distributions of gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria in both groups, while wound closure and infecting isolates showed prevailing gram-positive bacteria in group P and gram-negative bacteria in group C. Positive cultures at each stage were correlated with the occurrence of infection but were not predictive of the infecting species, which were nosocomial bacteria in most cases. Positive cultures at wound closure warn of a higher infection risk. Twenty-one of 316 (6.6%) patients in group P and 24 of 300 (8%) in group C were considered infected within 3 months. The difference is not significant (chi-square test p0.42; Pp0.51). Infecting strains were isolated from 38 patients (group P, 18; group C, 20). Infecting species,although not predictable, appear to be those escaping the spectrum of the prescribed antimicrobial prophylaxis.
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