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Infections in the intensive care unit. Wanida Paoin Thammasat University. EPIDEMIOLOGY. Contributing factors Patients in ICUs have more chronic comorbid illnesses and more severe acute physiologic derangements . The high frequency of indwelling catheters among ICU patients
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Infections in the intensive care unit Wanida Paoin Thammasat University
EPIDEMIOLOGY • Contributing factors • Patients in ICUs have more chronic comorbid illnesses and more severe acute physiologic derangements. • The high frequency of indwelling catheters among ICU patients • The use and maintenance of these catheters necessitate frequent contact with health care workers, which predispose patients to colonization and infection with nosocomial pathogens. • Multidrug-resistant pathogens such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) are being isolated with increasing frequency in ICUs
EPIDEMIOLOGY • A multicenter, prospective cohort surveillance study of 46 hospitals in Central and South America, India, Morocco, and Turkey. • Rates of device-associated infection were determined between 2002 and 2005; an overall rate of 14.7 percent or 22.5 infections per 1000 ICU days was found. • Specific devices: • Ventilator associated pneumonia (VAP); 24.1 cases/1000 ventilator days (range 10.0-52.7) • CVC-related bloodstream infections; 12.5/1000 catheter days (7.8-18.5) • Catheter-associated urinary tract infections; 8.9/1000 catheter days (1.7-12.8)
CATHETER-ASSOCIATED UTI • UTI is the most common nosocomial infection (> 40% of all nosocomial infections) • CAUTIs are the second most common cause of nosocomial bloodstream infection, which have an attributable mortality • Risk factors • The major risk factor is an indwelling urinary catheter • The risk increases directly with the duration of catheterization. • The daily incidence of catheter-associated bacteriuria is approximately 5% • After catheters have been in place for 1 week, bacteriuria or candiduria develop in 25%; after 30 days, the great majority of patients will have bacteriuria.
CATHETER-ASSOCIATED UTI • Other important risk factors for CAUTI • Patients with other sites of active infection • Long hospital stay • Malnutrition • Female sex • Abnormal serum creatinine • Improper catheter care (particularly placement of the drainage tube above the level of the bladder)
Prevention • The most effective method to prevent CAUTI is to avoid unnecessary placement of indwelling urinary catheters and to limit the duration of catheterization once a catheter is in place. • Use of indwelling catheters should be limited to • patients with anatomic or physiologic urinary obstruction; • patients undergoing surgery of the genitourinary tract; • patients requiring accurate monitoring of urine output (ie, critically ill or postoperative patients); • debilitated, comatose, or paralyzed patients. • Once a catheter is in place, it should be removed as quickly as possible, when it is no longer needed.
Prevention • The condom catheter is a good alternative to the indwelling catheter for men and is associated with lower rates of bacteriuria • Intermittent bladder catheterization has been shown to reduce the incidence of UTI in long-term spinal cord injury patients compared to an indwelling catheter, this approach has not been studied in patients with shorter-term indwelling bladder catheters. • Suprapubic catheters might be more comfortable for patients and have been shown to lower the incidence of bacteriuria
Catheter insertion and maintenance • Aseptic technique: handwashing, sterile gloves, a sterile drape, antiseptic solution • Once in place, • Maintaining a closed drainage system • The only part of the drainage system that should be opened is the bag drainage tube • The number of manipulations and accesses of the drainage system should be minimized. • The collecting tubing and bag should always be placed below the patient and the tubing should be maintained at a level above the drainage bag
Antimicrobial therapy • Topical antimicrobials • Place between the catheter and urethral mucosa • Soaking catheters in, continuous irrigation of the bladder with an anti-infective solution, • Placement of anti-infective solutions into the collection bag • Not been shown to effectively prevent CAUTI • Systemic antimicrobial prophylaxis • Can reduce the risk for CAUTI in short-term catheterization; • Increased long term risk for infections caused by multidrug resistant organisms • Treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria does not decrease the incidence of febrile episodes but does increase the recovery of antibiotic-resistant bacteria
Different catheter composition • Catheters impregnated with antimicrobial agents (minocycline and rifampin) and the antiseptic agent nitrofurazone have been demonstrated to reduce CAUTI rates in small studies • The potential for selection of multidrug-resistant pathogens • The silver-hydrogel catheter prevents adherence of bacterial and yeast pathogens to the catheter surface. • Catheters coated with antiseptic silver compounds have shown promise by some investigators but have been ineffective in other large, well-controlled trials.