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Septicemia Related to Indwelling Venous Catheter
124
Citations
11
References
1968
Year
Total CathetersHospital MedicineHealthcare-associated InfectionSepsisInfection ControlAcute Care SurgeryHospital EpidemiologyVenous DiseaseInfective EndocarditisVenous CathetersClinical MicrobiologyAntibioticsIndwelling Venous CatheterPatient SafetyClinical InfectionVascular AccessMedicineImmediate RemovalEmergency Medicine
Indwelling venous catheters were responsible for 19 of 44 hospital-acquired septicemias. The catheter was in place an average of 5.2 days and was associated with phlebitis or infected wounds or both in 18 cases (95%). Etiologic agents were<i>Staphylococcus aureus</i>, 13; gramnegative bacilli, 5; and a nonpathogenic yeast. Neither associated diseases (12) nor inappropriate diagnosis (12) nor treatment (9) influenced survival (17 [89%]), provided the catheter was removed. Both related deaths were due to S<i>aureus</i>; endocarditis was a complication in one. The septicemia rate for the 756 patients with catheters in place more than 48 hours was 2.5%. House physicians maintained 10% of the total catheters but were responsible for 17 (89%) of the related septicemias. We recommend daily observation of the catheter and immediate removal from phlebitic sites.
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