1. Blood culture time to positivity in non-β-hemolytic streptococcal bacteremia as a predictor of infective endocarditis—a retrospective cohort study
- Author
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David Krus, Bo Nilson, Magnus Rasmussen, Fredrik Kahn, and Torgny Sunnerhagen
- Subjects
Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,Infectious Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Population ,Bacteremia ,medicine.disease_cause ,Blood culture ,Cohort Studies ,Medical microbiology ,Streptococcal Infections ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,heterocyclic compounds ,education ,neoplasms ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Aged, 80 and over ,education.field_of_study ,Endocarditis ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Clinical Laboratory Medicine ,business.industry ,Streptococcus ,Brief Report ,Time to positivity ,Retrospective cohort study ,Endocarditis, Bacterial ,General Medicine ,respiratory system ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Infectious Diseases ,Infective endocarditis ,Female ,business ,therapeutics ,Cohort study - Abstract
Non-β-hemolytic streptococci (NBHS) cause infective endocarditis (IE) and a short blood culture time to positivity (TTP) is associated with risk of IE in bacteremia with other pathogens. In this retrospective population-based cohort study, we investigate if TTP is associated to IE or mortality. Of 263 episodes with NBHS bacteremia, 28 represented IE and the median TTP did not differ significantly between episodes with IE (15 h) and non-IE (15 h) (p=0.51). TTP was similar among those who survived and those who died within 30 days. However, TTP significantly differed when comparing the different streptococcal groups (p
- Published
- 2021
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