A Prospective Study of the Microflora of Nonpuerperal Breast Abscess
- 1 July 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 123 (7) , 908-911
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1988.01400310122021
Abstract
• The majority of reports concerning nonpuerperal breast abscess (NPBA) identify aerobic and facultative bacterial Isolates as the predominant flora in this disease. In the present study, fine-needle aspiration was performed in 29 women with NPBA; 12(41%) of the patients had a history of chronic NPBA. The mean age of patients was 39.2 years. The aspirated material was cultured both anaerobically and aerobically. A total of 108 bacterial strains were recovered from 32 specimens; two specimens yielded no bacterial growth. A mean of 3.6 different bacteria were recovered from each culture-positive specimen. Anaerobic recovery outweighed aerobic-facultative recovery by a factor of 2:1. Significantly, 37 strains (five aerobes and 32 anaerobes) were harvested only from enriched broth subcultured for four to 14 days after initial culture processing. Coagulase-negative staphylococci (60% of total aerobes) and peptostreptococcl (47% of total anaerobes) were the predominant bacterial Isolates. These findings Indicate that NPBA Is due to a mixed flora with a major anaerobic component. Furthermore, the results suggest that routine cultures often overlook the Involvement of anaerobes In these Infections. (Arch Surg 1988;123:908-911)Keywords
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