Pseudomonas maltophilia Bacteremia in Children Undergoing Open Heart Surgery

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Abstract

Pseudomonas maltophilia was isolated from intraoperative blood cultures in eight of 13 children undergoing open heart surgery during a five-week period. Antibiograms were identical and included resistance to prophylactic antibiotics. The source of the outbreak was traced to contamination of both the calibration device used on the pressure monitoring system and the sensor surface of transducers used in this system. In a mock system, calibration with a contaminated device resulted in recovery of the organism from transducer dome fluid. Dye studies confirmed the integrity of the transducer membrane but demonstrated reflux of dome fluid into the monitoring line fluid. A case-control study revealed no patient- or surgery-related factors predisposing to P maltophilia bacteremia and no excess of morbidity or mortality in patients as a result of bacteremia. The outbreak was confined to patients undergoing open heart surgery and was terminated abruptly by sterilization of transducers and revision of the calibration device. © 1981, American Medical Association. All rights reserved.

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APA

Fisher, M. C., Long, S. S., Roberts, E. M., Dunn, J. M., & Balsara, R. K. (1981). Pseudomonas maltophilia Bacteremia in Children Undergoing Open Heart Surgery. JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 246(14), 1571–1574. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1981.03320140059032

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