Autor: |
Delaval, Laure, Bouyer, Benjamin, Rouis, Karama, Pourbaix, Annabelle, Fernandez‐Gerlinger, Marie‐Paule, Podglajen, Isabelle, Lebeaux, David |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
APMIS; Jan2023, Vol. 131 Issue 1, p26-33, 8p |
Abstrakt: |
To determine if additional agar plates could allow earlier detection of anaerobes in spinal surgical site infections (SSIs), we performed a prospective study (November 2017‐January 2019) of patients with early spinal SSIs. In addition to routine 14‐day cultures, surgical samples were inoculated onto three additional plates (CDC anaerobe agar with 5% sheep blood [CDC], CDC anaerobe laked sheep blood agar with kanamycin/vancomycin [BBL], and Bacteroides bile esculin [BBE] agar with amikacin (BD, USA)) incubated under anaerobic conditions (72 h, 37°C). The primary endpoint was detection of anaerobes by these methods, as compared to routine culture. Anaerobes were identified in 7/61 patients (11%) using the routine procedure and in one extra case with additional plates (overall detection rate 8/61, 13%). Sensitivity was greater for the CDC plate than for the BBL and BBE plates. When routine culture was positive, the CDC plate was always positive, and in three cases showed at least one additional anaerobe. Using additional agar plates, anaerobes were identified in early spinal SSI in 13% of patients. Within 3 days, CDC agar plate enabled detection of anaerobes in one extra case and at least one additional anaerobe in three other cases, compared to routine 14‐day culture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: |
Complementary Index |
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