Catheter Related Bacterial Infections Mimic Reactions to Exogenous Pyrogens During Hemodialysis
- 1 July 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Asaio Journal
- Vol. 40 (3) , M674-M677
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00002480-199407000-00083
Abstract
Pyrogenic reactions are characterized by fever, chills, hypotension, or a combination of these developing during or shortly after hemodialysis in a previously asymptomatic patient. The temporal association with treatment implicates exposure of the patient's blood to bacterial pyrogens from contaminated dialysate or a reused dialyzer. Routine body temperature monitoring is recommended to detect these exposures. The current study was prompted by the appearance of several symptomatic febrile episodes in patients who were asymptomatic and afebrile before treatment with high-flux hemodialysis. During a 6 month period, temperatures were measured with a digital oral thermometer before and after 9,605 high-flux hemodialyses in 163 patients. Elevations above 100 degrees F (37.8 degrees C) were observed during or after 33 dialyses in 15 patients. In 18 of these dialyses, the temperature was also elevated before treatment began. Four patients who had no symptoms or fever before dialysis accounted for febrile reactions during 11 of the remaining 15 dialysis treatments. Fever was accompanied by rigors during most of the episodes. Subsequent blood cultures grew Enterococcus faecalis (two), Enterobacter cloacae (two), and Pseudomonas aeruginosa and cepacia (one). All four patients had indwelling silastic double lumen venous catheters (PermCaths), all responded to intravenous antibiotics, and all required eventual removal of the catheter. The apparent precipitation of sepsis by dialysis indicates that shear forces caused by high pulsatile blood flow through the catheter may dislodge organisms that have colonized the lumen. Intraluminal instillation of antibiotics is suggested as a preventative measure.Keywords
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