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  • Ventriculitis Complicating ...
    Lyke, K. E.; Obasanjo, O. O.; Williams, M. A.; O'Brien, M.; Chotani, R.; Perl, T. M.

    Clinical infectious diseases, 12/2001, Volume: 33, Issue: 12
    Journal Article

    Ventriculitis is a serious complication of intraventricular catheter (IVC) use, with rates of IVC-related infections ranging from 0% to 45% and gram-positive organisms predominating. We prospectively analyzed ventriculostomy-related infections occurring among 157 adult neurosurgical patients (mean age, 54.9 years; 90 57% were women) from 1995 through 1998, to determine the incidence of, risk factors for, and organisms that cause ventriculitis. A total of 196 IVC events resulted in 11 infections (5.6%; 9 were caused by gram-negative organisms and 2 by coagulase-negative staphylococci). Independent risk factors for IVC-related infection include length of IVC placement (8.5 days infected vs. 5.1 days uninfected; P = .007) and cerebrospinal fluid leakage about the IVC (P = .003). The length of hospital stay (30.8 days vs. 22.6 days; P = .03) and mean total hospital charges ($85,674.27 vs. $55,339.21; P = .009) were greater for infected patients than for uninfected patients. In addition, a microbiologic shift from gram-positive organisms toward gram-negative organisms was noted. This study suggests that IVC-related infections remain serious infections that increase the length of hospitalization.