Bronchoscopic and nonbronchoscopic methods of airway culturing in tracheostomized children

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Abstract

Distal airway secretions can be sampled by bronchoscopic bronchoalveolar lavage (B-BAL), blind protected BAL (BP-BAL), and tracheal aspiration (TA). We quantitatively compared the cultures of distal airway secretions from BP-BAL, B-BAL, and TA specimens, and assessed the efficacy of the three above methods in diagnosing bronchitis in tracheostomized children. METHODS: Twenty children with tracheostomies underwent BP-BAL, B-BAL, and TA. Samples were sent for quantitative bacterial cultures. The diagnosis of bronchitis was made based on a validated visual grading system as well as on positive quantitative cultures from the BAL fluid. Diagnostic agreement between cultures obtained by the three methods and the visual grading scores was determined by kappa statistics. RESULTS: The diagnosis of bronchitis by visual grading score had substantial agreement with BP-BAL, moderate agreement with B-BAL, and fair agreement with TA results. BP-BAL specimens had significantly lower pathogenic colonies (P

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Afolabi-Brown, O., Marcus, M., Speciale, P., Pagala, M., & Kazachkov, M. (2014). Bronchoscopic and nonbronchoscopic methods of airway culturing in tracheostomized children. Respiratory Care, 59(4), 582–587. https://doi.org/10.4187/respcare.02483

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