A retrospective study was made of 44 elderly patients with bacteraemia treated in the period 1974-1980. Positive blood cultures in 5 cases were considered clinically insignificant. Twenty-six of the remaining 39 patients were found to have a Gram-negative bacteraemia, mainly associated with urinary tract infection. Abnormalities of liver function were common but 5 jaundiced patients with Gram-negative infection were shown to have stones in the common bile duct. The value of blood cultures as a diagnostic aid in the non-specifically ill elderly patient is emphasized. © 1981 The Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine.
CITATION STYLE
Madden, J. W., Croker, J. R., & Beynon, G. P. J. (1981). Septicaemia in the elderly. Postgraduate Medical Journal, 57(670), 502–506. https://doi.org/10.1136/pgmj.57.670.502
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