Gastric and Pharyngeal Flora in Nosocomial Pneumonia Acquired during Mechanical Ventilation
- 1 August 1993
- journal article
- Published by American Thoracic Society in American Review of Respiratory Disease
- Vol. 148 (2) , 352-357
- https://doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm/148.2.352
Abstract
We studied the interrelations between gastric, pharyngeal, proximal, and distal airway bacterial flora in ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) on 36 patients with nosocomial pneumonia acquired during mechanical ventilation (MV) and 27 mechanically ventilated control subjects without pulmonary infection. Gastric, pharyngeal, and endotracheal (EA) sampling for quantitative cultures were performed upon all patients, as well as fiberoptic bronchoscopy with protected specimen brush (PSB) sampling. Mean bacterial and fungi colony counts were significantly increased in pharyngeal, EA, and PSB samples in patients with VAP compared with control subjects. The overall increase in colonization was due to gram-positive cocci in all samples. In addition, gram-negative bacilli and fungi mean counts increased significantly in PSB pneumonia samples versus control samples. However, mean gastric colonization was similar in both patients with VAP and control subjects. In the former group there was an increase in coincident microorganisms isolated from gastric, pharyngeal, and EA samples in relation to PSB samples compared with control samples. Among the different quantitative cultures analyzed, only those obtained from EA significantly correlated with PSB cultures in patients with pneumonia (r = 0.67, p = 0.001). In summary, the present study shows that the coincidence between microorganisms isolated in PSB cultures and those from gastric and oropharynx increase in MV patients with pneumonia, indicating that both reservoirs play a key role in the pathogenesis of pneumonia. Conceivably, preventing both gastric and pharyngeal colonization may reduce the incidence of ventilator-associated pneumonia. From all the noninvasive samples studied only endotracheal aspirate cultures were useful for inferring the etiology of some VAP pneumonias.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gastric Colonization by Gram-Negative Bacilli and Nosocomial Pneumonia in the Intensive Care Unit PatientChest, 1992
- Nosocomial Pneumonia and the Role of Gastric pHChest, 1991
- Ventilator-Associated Pneumonia in Patients with Respiratory FailureChest, 1990
- Nosocomial pneumonia in the intubated patient: Role of gastric colonizationEuropean Journal of Clinical Microbiology & Infectious Diseases, 1989
- Prevention of colonization and infection in critically ill patientsCritical Care Medicine, 1988
- Nosocomial Pneumonia in Intubated Patients Given Sucralfate as Compared with Antacids or Histamine Type 2 BlockersNew England Journal of Medicine, 1987
- Risk of acute stress bleeding and nosocomial pneumonia in ventilated intensive care unit patients: Sucralfate versus antacidsThe American Journal of Medicine, 1987
- The Effect of Oropharyngeal Decontamination Using Topical Nonabsorbable Antibiotics on the Incidence of Nosocomial Respiratory Tract Infections in Multiple Trauma PatientsPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1987
- ASPIRATION OF GASTRIC BACTERIA IN ANTACID-TREATED PATIENTS: A FREQUENT CAUSE OF POSTOPERATIVE COLONISATION OF THE AIRWAYThe Lancet, 1982
- STOMACH AS SOURCE OF BACTERIA COLONISING RESPIRATORY TRACT DURING ARTIFICIAL VENTILATIONThe Lancet, 1978