Staphylococcus epidermidis Bacteremia Associated With Vascular Catheters: An Important Cause of Febrile Morbidity in Hospitalized Patients

Abstract
Seventeen episodes of persistent Staphylococcus epidermidis bacteremia (one to nine days) occurred in 16 patients with vascular catheters during a 26-month period. Cases were statistically more likely to have a longer hospitalization (54 v 7.6 days, p < .0005), longer duration of antibiotic therapy (22 v 2.5 days, p = .002), presence of a central venous pressure (CVP) catheter (14 v 2, p < 3 C without another identifiable cause, and the average white cell count for the case group was 19,400/mm. Seven patients also had diaphoresis, confusion, hypotension, or oliguria. Temperatures returned to normal in 13 within 24 hours after catheter removal, and all patients were afebrile and symptom-free within 72 hours. Thus, vascular catheter-associated S. epidermidis bacteremia was an important case of febrile morbidity in these patients.