Publication: Bed rails and endotracheal tube connectors as possible sources for spreading Acinetobacter baumannii in ventilator-associated pneumonia patients
Issued Date
2008-07-01
Resource Type
ISSN
01251562
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2-s2.0-49749086475
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Mahidol University
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SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health. Vol.39, No.4 (2008), 676-685
Suggested Citation
Suphawita Chaladchalam, Pornphan Diraphat, Fuangfa Utrarachkij, Orasa Suthienkul, Rudiwilai Samakoses, Kanokrat Siripanichgon Bed rails and endotracheal tube connectors as possible sources for spreading Acinetobacter baumannii in ventilator-associated pneumonia patients. Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health. Vol.39, No.4 (2008), 676-685. Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/19614
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Title
Bed rails and endotracheal tube connectors as possible sources for spreading Acinetobacter baumannii in ventilator-associated pneumonia patients
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Abstract
This study aimed to determine molecular patterns of Acinetobacter baumannii using a PCR-based technique with REP-1, REP-2 and M13 primers to distinguish the patients' strains and the environmental strains (condensate, endotracheal tube connector, bed rail and nurses hands). There were 67 cases of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) among 600 patients using mechanical ventilators in 10 wards from March to July 2006. The incidence of VAP was 11.2% or 8.9/1,000 ventilator days with a 54.5% fatality rate. Among 19 of 22 A. baumannii VAP patients, 68.4% (13/19) had their environmental samples contaminated with A. baumannii and the most common contaminated sites were bed rails and endotracheal tube connectors (36.8% each). Multidrug resistant (MDR) A baumannii were involved in 77.3% of A baumannii-VAP. Molecular typing of 96 A baumannii isolates was able to differentiate A baumannii isolates into 7 types. Type 2 was the most common and found in 77.3% (17/22) of A baumannii VAP patients admitted in 6 of 7 wards. Identical fingerprints were found in clinical isolates and their bed rails, endotracheal tube connectors and condensates of 5 patients. The results demonstrate that multiple clones of MDR A baumannii were widely spread in the hospital. Bed rails and contaminated endotracheal tube connectors could be potential sources of A baumannii spread.