Previous Page  2 / 10 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 2 / 10 Next Page
Page Background

conferenceseries

.com

Volume 5

Neonatal and Pediatric Medicine

Faneotrics 2019

March 21-22, 2019

Page 27

Notes:

March 21-22, 2019 Dubai, UAE

28

th

World Neonatal, Pediatric and Family

Medicine Conference

Prevalence of nosocomial pneumonia associated to ventilators by MDR pathogens in a second level

hospital during a two year period

Guillermo Francisco Rosales Magallanes, Becerra-Cardenas Eduardo Daniel and Luis-Ordaz Alan

Issstecali Baja California, Mexico

Aim:

The study aims to determine the frequency of ventilator associated pneumonia by MDR bacteria, patient’s characteristics

and associated mortality rate in Hospital Issstecali during 2016-2017.

Design:

It is a descriptive, observational, analytical and retrospective study.

Method:

We collected data from the clinical records of patients who had presented ventilator associated nosocomial pneumonia

with a bacterial isolate with an MDR profile. We included gender, age, comorbidities, predisposing risk factors, results of

isolates, sensibility pattern, days of stay and obtained results. Frequencies and rates were calculated.

Results:

During January 2016-November 2017, there were 106 cases of nosocomial pneumonia of which 56 of them were

ventilator related. Bronchial secretion cultureswere included in a 52%coming frommenofmedian age of 62 years, comorbidities,

arterial hypertension (50%), diabetes mellitus (41.5%), chronic kidney disease (14.9%), stroke and bedriddenness. A mean of

27.3 days of hospital stay were calculated. Of the total cultures, 26 of them showed development of bacteria with a MDR

phenotype (24%) (Attack rate: 3.6 cases/1000 days of mechanical ventilation).

Pseudomonas aeruginosa

in 11 cultures (42.3%),

Crhyseomonas luteola

15.3% of cultures and

Escherichia coli

11.5%,

Klebsiella

group 47 7.6%. Their mechanisms of resistance

were determined according to the phenotype reported in the anti microbiogram, showing a resistance to more than four

families of antibiotics. The mortality rate was calculated at 19.3% cases in which the cause of death was directly related to the

infectious process (rate: 0.7 deaths in 1000 egresses).

Conclusion:

The isolation of MDR pathogens is not very common. However, they generate a high mortality/morbidity index

and a great weight in our unit.

Recommendations:

Reinforce the rational use of antibiotics program as well as the control of nosocomial infections so as to

reduce their impact.

Biography

Guillermo Francisco Rosales Magallanes is the Head of Service of Infectology at Hospital Issstecali Mexicali in Baja California. Currently he is dedicated to the area

of clinical research in the area of infections associated with health care.

dr_gmagal76@hotmail.com

Guillermo Francisco Rosales Magallanes et al., Neonat Pediatr Med 2019, Volume 5

DOI: 10.4172/2572-4983-C1-011