1. Bacterial Meningitis among Intracranial Surgery Patients at a University Hospital in Northern India.
- Author
-
Kar, Mitra, Jamwal, Ashima, Dubey, Akanksha, Sahu, Chinmoy, and Patel, Sangram Singh
- Subjects
- *
BACTERIAL disease risk factors , *CEREBROSPINAL fluid leak , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *NEUROSURGERY , *GRAM-negative bacteria , *SURGICAL complications , *SURGERY , *PATIENTS , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *TERTIARY care , *BACTERIAL meningitis , *RISK assessment , *CEREBROSPINAL fluid shunts , *INFECTION , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MULTIDRUG resistance , *CEREBROSPINAL fluid , *COMPLICATIONS of prosthesis , *COMORBIDITY , *DISEASE risk factors ,CENTRAL nervous system infections - Abstract
Background: Cerebrospinal infections are the cause of poor prognosis among post-neurosurgery patients owing to delay in improvement of neurological functions, leading to increased length of hospital stay, proceeding to disability or death. Methods and materials: This retrospective observational study was performed at a tertiary care center in Northern India, where all patients with bacterial cerebrospinal infections from July 2019 to July 2022 were evaluated for post-neurosurgery cerebrospinal shunt infections, and all demographic data and risk factors were extracted from the hospital information system (HIS). Results: The study includes 150 (150/1986, 7.55%) culture-confirmed cases of bacterial meningitis out of 1986 cases of suspected bacterial meningitis patients. Ninety-six (96/150, 64.0%) post-neurosurgery patients with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leaks were managed using external ventricular drain (EVD) or ventriculo-peritoneal (VP) shunt. Seventy-four (74/96, 77.08%) patients were managed only on EVD, whereas 22 (22/96, 22.92%) patients were managed only on VP shunt. Eighty-two (82/96, 85.4%) multidrug-resistant microorganisms (MDROs)were isolated and 70 (70/82, 85.36%) were Gram-negative bacteria, of which 56 (56/74, 75.68%) Gram-negative bacteria showed extended-spectrum betalactamase (ESBL)-producing character in those with an EVD, 14 (14/22, 63.63%) with a VP shunt. Among Gram-negative bacteria, Acinetobacter baumannii showed high rates of resistance: 21 (21/23, 91.30%) and 8 (8/8, 100%) were ESBL-producing A. baumannii in patients managed on EVD and VP shunt, respectively. Conclusion: This study determines the risk factors, the spectrum of pathogenic microorganisms, multidrug resistance, and the nature of intracranial lesions isolated among the patients who developed bacterial cerebrospinal infections in post-neurosurgery patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022