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This course includes emerging and reemerging diseases, public health issues and nanotechnology aspects of microbiology and other topics mainly. Main concepts explained in this lectures are: Nosocomial Infections, Hassan Rasouli, Nosocomial Infections, Healthcare Associated, Risk, Sources of Microbial Agents, Hygienic P Ractices and Antibiotics, Microbial Reservoirs and Transmission, Catheter Associated Urinary Tract, Symptoms and Treatment
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“…hundreds of millions of patients around the world are affected by healthcare
associated infections every year and that an estimated
to
percent of patients admitted to modern hospitals in the developed world acquire one or more infections”
The World Health Organization
Before basic hygienic practices and antibiotics ‐ hospital infections were due to pathogens of external origin, not normal microbial flora
Most are now opportunistic microorganisms common in general populations - E.g. Staphylococcus aureus
Permanent and transient flora of patient - Normal flora transmitted through damaged tissue, outside of normal tissue reservoir or inappropriate antibiotic therapy - Flora of other patient or staff member - Direct contact - Aerosols - Contaminated food or objects - Flora from healthcare environment - Endogenous or exogenous microbes - Water, damp areas, linen, equipment and supplies, fine dust and droplets in the air
Number one most common nosocomial infection - At risk - More women than men - Immuno ‐ compromised patients - Catheter use - Patients with nerve damage around bladder - Infection caused by E. coli - Gram ‐ negative - Normal flora - E. coli 0157:H shiga ‐ producing toxin - Affects the Bladder, kidney, urethra
Symptoms:
Bladder infection: burning sensation while urinating, bloody urine, fatigue - Kidney infection: high fever, abdominal pain, chills - Treatment - Antibiotics for up to 2 weeks - Fluoroquinolones - Amoxicillin - Fluids
Treatment - Halting antibiotic treatment - Metronidazole or vancomycin use - Surgery to remove infected part of intestine - Fecal bacteriotherapy - WHAT? - Fecal bacteriotherapy (Stool transplant) - Infusing intestinal microorganisms in suspension of healthy donor stool into intestine of a sick patient in attempt to return the normal microbial flora - Study: 317 patients treated across 27 case series - Results: highly effective - Disease resolution in 92% of cases
Common postoperative complication
14 ‐ 17% of all hospital ‐ acquired infections - 38% of hospital ‐ acquired infections in surgical patients - Gram positive species - Staphylococcus aureus - Streptococcus pyogenes - Enterococcus - Symptoms:^ • Purulent discharge abscess or spreading cellulitis at
of patients that have been on ventilator for over
days get
microbial causes:
Pseudomonas aeruginosa - Staphylococcus aureus - Enterobacteriaceae - Haemophilus influenzae - Streptococcus species e.g. S. pneumoniae
Symptoms
At least 2 of these symptoms: - Cough, purulent sputum, new infiltrate on chest radiograph consistent with infection - Treatment - Early onset: ceftriaxone, fluoroquinolones - Late ‐ onset: antipseudomonal cephalosporins, beta ‐ lactam inhibitors with antipseudomonal fluoroquinolone - High case mortality rate
Vancomycin
resistant Enterococcus
Gram ‐ positive found in healthy intestines of mammals - Mutant strain that is resistant to vancomycin - Vancomycin: very strong antibiotic - used as last resort - Spread: fecal to oral route - Risk factor: cephalosporins
Increased Morbidity and Mortality Rates
Economic Costs - Due to extended hospital stays, extra treatments, lab tests, medication, isolation, supplies, nursing and physician care, general maintenance ‐ $20, ‐ 25, per patient per year ‐ Total: $1. billion per year ‐ Importance of prevention