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Factors Predisposing to Oropharyngeal Colonization with Gram-Negative Bacilli in the Aged

List of authors.
  • William M. Valenti, M.D.,
  • Randall G. Trudell, B.S.,
  • and David W. Bentley, M.D.

Abstract

To assess the factors responsible for oropharyngeal colonization with gram-negative bacilli among elderly persons in institutions, we performed a cross-sectional survey of 407 volunteers, 65 years of age and older, who had not received antimicrobials in the previous four weeks. Colonization increased with level of care: from 9 per cent in independent residents of apartments to 60 per cent in patients on an acute hospital ward (P<0.0001). Klebsiella species was found in 41 per cent of those with colonization, Escherichia coli in 24 per cent and enterobacter species in 14 per cent. There was no association between numbers of normal flora and numbers of gram-negative bacilli. Associated with colonization were bladder incontinence, deteriorating or terminal clinical status, inability to walk or perform activities of daily living and incapacitation due to neoplastic, respiratory and cardiac disease (P<0.05). Multivariate analysis indicated that respiratory disease and being bedridden contributed most to colonization. (N Engl J Med 298:1108–1111, 1978)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported by an NIH BRSG Institutional Grant to the University of Rochester and by the American Lung Association, Finger Lakes Region, Inc.

Presented in part at the eastern regional meeting of the American Federation for Clinical Research, Boston, MA, January 13, 1977.

We are indebted to a number of persons at several institutions for assistance with the patient-volunteers, especially Dr. Eli Leven and Nancy Read, R.N. (St. John's Home), Dr. Paul Duffy, Dr. Samuel Aversano and Jeanne Donato, R.N. (St. Anne's Home), Mr. Mark Hamister and Mrs. Kathryn Metherell (Shire-at-Culverton) and to the Department of Nursing at Monroe Community Hospital, to Dr. T. Franklin Williams and Nancy Watson, R.N., at the Monroe Community Hospital, who assisted in developing the severity-of-illness questionnaire, to Dr. K. Ruben Gabriel and Mrs. Elaine Tarana, Division of Biostatistics, University of Rochester, who assisted in the data analysis, to Dr. Richard E. D'Amato, Analytab Products, who kindly supplied materials for the API-20 system, to Mrs. Elizabeth Pincus, Mrs. Katherine Ha and Mr. Kenneth Mamot, who provided technical assistance, and to Drs. T. Franklin Williams and William Barker, who reviewed the manuscript.

Author Affiliations

From the Infectious Diseases Unit, Monroe Community Hospital, and the Department of Medicine, University of Rochester, School of Medicine and Dentistry (address reprint requests to Dr. Bentley at Monroe Community Hospital, Infectious Diseases Unit, 435 E. Henrietta Rd., Rochester, NY 14607).

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