Publication | Closed Access
In situ diagnosis of intravascular catheter-related bloodstream infection: A comparison of quantitative culture, differential time to positivity, and endoluminal brushing
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References
2005
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All three techniques had relatively high sensitivity. However, inability to obtain samples via central venous catheters is a major drawback of the differential time to positivity and quantitative blood culture approaches. Differential time to positivity is simple to perform and has high specificity and therefore could be used as a first line approach, with the endoluminal brush reserved for cases where blood cannot be obtained. All lumens of multiple-lumen central venous catheters must be sampled to ensure maximal sensitivity.
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