The use of continuous monitoring blood culture systems in the diagnosis of catheter related sepsis

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Abstract

Aim - To assess whether the information provided by automated continuous monitoring blood culture systems could aid in the diagnosis of catheter related sepsis. Methods - Serial dilutions of a strain of coagulase negative staphylococcus were inoculated into the BacT/Alert blood culture system. Blood culture results for seven patients with possible catheter related sepsis from coagulase negative staphylococci were reviewed. Results - Time to positivity and length of lag period were strongly related to the concentration of bacteria inoculated (average decrease of 1.5 hours to positivity for each 10-fold increase in concentration). Time to positivity and length of lag period were significantly shorter for central line blood cultures than for those taken from peripheral sites. Conclusions - Using data already measured by continuous monitoring blood culture systems may provide a simple alternative to quantitative blood cultures for the diagnosis of catheter related sepsis.

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APA

Rogers, M. S., & Oppenheim, B. A. (1998). The use of continuous monitoring blood culture systems in the diagnosis of catheter related sepsis. Journal of Clinical Pathology, 51(8), 635–637. https://doi.org/10.1136/jcp.51.8.635

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