Epidemiological analysis of bacterial strains involved in hospital infection in a University Hospital from Brazil

Authors

  • Bianca Aguiar de MORAES Fundação Oswaldo Cruz; Instituto Oswaldo Cruz; Departamento de Bacteriologia; Laboratório de Enterobactérias
  • Cristiane Andrade Nery CRAVO Fundação Oswaldo Cruz; Instituto Oswaldo Cruz; Departamento de Bacteriologia; Laboratório de Enterobactérias
  • Marcio Martins LOUREIRO Fundação Oswaldo Cruz; Instituto Oswaldo Cruz; Departamento de Bacteriologia; Laboratório de Enterobactérias
  • Claude André SOLARI Universidade do Rio de Janeiro; Hospital Universitário Gaffrée e Guinle; Departamento de Bacteriologia; Laboratório de Enterobactérias
  • Marise Dutra ASENSI Fundação Oswaldo Cruz; Instituto Oswaldo Cruz; Departamento de Bacteriologia; Laboratório de Enterobactérias

Keywords:

Hospital infect, Antimicrobial resista, Salmonella outbr

Abstract

Hospital infections cause an increase in morbidity and mortality of hospitalized patients with significant rise in hospital costs. The aim of this work was an epidemiological analysis of hospital infection cases occurred in a public University Hospital in Rio de Janeiro. Hence, 238 strains were isolated from 14 different clinical materials of 166 patients hospitalized in the period between August 1995 and July 1997. The average age of the patients was 33.4 years, 72.9% used antimicrobials before having a positive culture. The most common risk conditions were surgery (19.3%), positive HIV or AIDS (18.1%) and lung disease (16.9%). 24 different bacterial species were identified, S. aureus (21%) and P. aeruginosa (18.5%) were predominant. Among 50 S. aureus isolated strains 36% were classified as MRSA (Methicillin Resistant S. aureus). The Gram negative bacteria presented high resistance to aminoglycosides and cephalosporins. A diarrhea outbreak, detected in high-risk neonatology ward, was caused by Salmonella serovar Infantis strain, with high antimicrobial resistance and a plasmid of high molecular weight (98Mda) containing virulence genes and positive for R factor.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2000-08-01

Issue

Section

Nosocomial infections

How to Cite

MORAES, B. A. de, CRAVO, C. A. N., LOUREIRO, M. M., SOLARI, C. A., & ASENSI, M. D. (2000). Epidemiological analysis of bacterial strains involved in hospital infection in a University Hospital from Brazil . Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De São Paulo, 42(4), 201-207. https://revistas.usp.br/rimtsp/article/view/30440