Using bronchoalveolar lavage to distinguish nosocomial pneumonia from systemic inflammatory response syndrome: A prospective analysis

被引:77
|
作者
Croce, MA
Fabian, TC
Schurr, MJ
Boscarino, R
Pritchard, FE
Minard, G
Patton, JH
Kudsk, KA
机构
关键词
D O I
10.1097/00005373-199512000-00022
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Objective: Ventilator-associated pneumonia (PN) is difficult to distinguish from trauma-induced systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIPS), especially in patients with multiple injuries. Previous work using bronchoscopy and quantitative cultures demonstrated significant bacterial growth in about one-third of patients with clinical evidence of PN, In this prospective study, antibiotic therapy for PN was based solely on quantitative bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) cultures. Methods: Mechanically ventilated trauma patients underwent bronchoscopy with BAL when they developed clinical evidence of PN: fever (temperature > 100.5 degrees F), white blood cells > 10,000 or >10% immature forms, purulent sputum, and new or changing infiltrate on chest roentgenogram, Patients with other infections or those receiving antibiotics for any other reason were excluded, Empiric antibiotic therapy for PN was started at the time of BAL, If the quantitative cultures revealed greater than or equal to 10(5) colony-forming units (CFU)/mL, that patient was defined as having PN and was treated, If the cultures revealed <10(5) CFU/mL, that patient was defined as having SIPS, and empiric therapy was stopped. Results: Forty-three patients (88% blunt, 12% penetrating) underwent bronchoscopy with BAI, 55 times, Mean age was 40 and Injury Severity Score was 25, Twenty patients had greater than or equal to 10(5) CFU/mL (47%) and 23 had <10(5) CFU/mL (53%). There were no differences in age, Injury Severity Score, temperature, white blood cell count, or ventilator days before BAL, between groups, Sixty-five percent of those with SIPS improved after empiric therapy was stopped (average 3.3 days), and 35% underwent repeat BAL, Three patients with the initial diagnosis of SIRS developed PN (13% of SIPS, Mortality for PN was 15%, compared with 17% for SIPS; no deaths were related to antibiotic therapy. Conclusions: SIPS, which can mimic PN, is common in trauma patients, These entities can he distinguished by bronchoscopy with BAL, Basing antibiotic therapy solely on quantitative BAL cultures is efficacious in trauma patients.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:1134 / 1140
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A PROSPECTIVE-STUDY OF PROTECTED BRONCHOALVEOLAR LAVAGE IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF NOSOCOMIAL PNEUMONIA
    ROUBY, JJ
    ROSSIGNON, MD
    NICOLAS, MH
    DELASSALE, EM
    CRISTIN, S
    GROSSET, J
    VIARS, P
    ANESTHESIOLOGY, 1989, 71 (05) : 679 - 685
  • [2] Systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) and shock following bronchoalveolar lavage.
    Chase, Margaret
    Wheeler, Derek S.
    Young, Lisa R.
    Uzark, Karen
    Spicer, Robert L.
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2006, 34 (12) : A175 - A175
  • [3] Systemic Inflammatory Cytokine-mediated Response After Bronchoalveolar Lavage in Mechanically Ventilated Patients With Suspected Pneumonia
    Estella, Angel
    Jareno, Antonio
    JOURNAL OF BRONCHOLOGY & INTERVENTIONAL PULMONOLOGY, 2012, 19 (02) : 102 - 108
  • [4] Systemic inflammatory response after bronchoalveolar lavage in critically ill patients
    Bauer, TT
    Arosio, C
    Montón, C
    Filella, X
    Xaubet, A
    Torres, A
    EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 2001, 17 (02) : 274 - 280
  • [5] Systemic inflammatory response syndrome and nosocomial infection in trauma
    Hoover, Leslie
    Bochicchio, Grant V.
    Napolitano, Lena M.
    Joshi, Manjari
    Bochicchio, Kelly
    Meyer, Walter
    Scalea, Thomas M.
    JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 2006, 61 (02): : 310 - 316
  • [6] Systemic inflammatory response syndrome and nosocomial infection in trauma - Discussion
    Miller, Preston
    Raghavendran, Krishnan
    Eachempati, Soumitra R.
    Raves, John J.
    Hoover, Leslie
    JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 2006, 61 (02): : 316 - 317
  • [7] Protected specimen brush or bronchoalveolar lavage to diagnose bacterial nosocomial pneumonia in ventilated adults: A meta-analysis
    de Jaeger, A
    Litalien, C
    Lacroix, J
    Guertin, MC
    Infante-Rivard, C
    CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 1999, 27 (11) : 2548 - 2560
  • [8] Persistent systemic inflammatory response syndrome is predictive of nosocomial infection in trauma
    Bochicchio, GV
    Napolitano, LM
    Joshi, M
    Knorr, K
    Tracy, JK
    Ilahi, O
    Scalea, TM
    JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 2002, 53 (02): : 245 - 251
  • [9] Morphological Analysis of Eosinophils in Bronchoalveolar Lavage Fluid from Patients with Eosinophilic Pneumonia
    Nureki, S.
    Ohno, S.
    Takenaka, R.
    Usagawa, Y.
    Yamasue, M.
    Yoshikawa, H.
    Komiya, K.
    Hashinaga, K.
    Mizukami, E.
    Umeki, K.
    Ando, M.
    Hiramatsu, K.
    Kadota, J.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2020, 201
  • [10] Diagnostic accuracy of inflammatory biomarkers in bronchoalveolar lavage from patients with ventilator-associated pneumonia
    Affara, Nasr
    Refaat, Alaa
    Hussein, Tamer
    Abdelfatah, Waleed
    Elberbi, Manal
    EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL, 2014, 44