Guidance regarding indications for initial or follow-up blood cultures is limited. We conducted a scoping review of articles published between January 2004 and June 2019 that reported the yield of blood cultures and/or their impact in the clinical management of fever and common infectious syndromes in nonneutropenic adult inpatients. A total of 2893 articles were screened; 50 were included. Based on the reported incidence of bacteremia, syndromes were categorized into low, moderate, and high pretest probability of bacteremia. Routine blood cultures are recommended in syndromes with a high likelihood of bacteremia (eg, endovascular infections) and those with moderate likelihood when cultures from the primary source of infection are unavailable or when prompt initiation of antibiotics is needed prior to obtaining primary source cultures. In syndromes where blood cultures are low-yield, blood cultures can be considered for patients at risk of adverse events if a bacteremia is missed (eg, patient with pacemaker and severe purulent cellulitis). If a patient has adequate source control and risk factors or concern for endovascular infection are not present, most streptococci or Enterobacterales bacteremias do not require routine follow-up blood cultures.
The optimal dose of vitamin D to optimize bone metabolism in the elderly is unclear. We tested the hypothesis a vitamin D, at a dose higher than recommended by the Institute of Medicine (IOM), has a beneficial effect on bone remodeling and mass. In this double blind trial we randomized 257 overweight elderly subjects to receive 1000 mg of elemental calcium citrate/day, and the daily equivalent of 3,750IU/day or 600 IU/day of vitamin D3 for one year. The subjects’ mean age was 71±4 years, body mass index 30±4 kg/m2, 55% were women, and 222 completed the 12-months follow-up. Mean serum 25 hydroxy-vitamin D (25OHD) was 20 ng/ml, and rose to 26 ng/ml in the low dose, and 36ng/ml in the high dose arm, at one year (p<0.05). Plasma parathyroid hormone, osteocalcin, and C-terminal telopeptide (Cross Laps) levels decreased significantly by 20–22% in both arms, but there were no differences between the two groups for any variable, at 6 or 12 months, with the exception of serum calcitriol that was higher in the high-dose group at 12 months. Bone mineral density (BMD) increased significantly at total hip and lumbar spine, but not femoral neck, in both arms, while subtotal body BMD increased in the high-dose group only, at one year. However, there were no significant differences in percent change BMD between the 2 arms at any skeletal site. Subjects with serum 25OHD below 20 ng/ml and PTH level above 76 pg/ml, showed a trend for higher BMD increments at all skeletal sites, in the high-dose group, that reached significance at the hip. Adverse events were comparable in the two study arms. This controlled trial demonstrates little additional benefit in vitamin D supplementation at a dose exceeding the IOM recommendation of 600IU/day on BMD and bone markers, in overweight elderly individuals.
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