Takashi Saito, Kazuyoshi Senda, Shunji Takakura, Naoko Fujihara, Toyoichiro Kudo, Yoshitsugu Iinuma, Naohisa Fujita, Toshiaki Komori, Naoshi Baba, Toshinobu Horii, Kimiko Matsuoka, Mitsune Tanimoto, Satoshi Ichiyama
Anaerobic Bacteremia: The Yield of Positive
Anaerobic Blood Cultures: Patient Characteristics
and Potential Risk Factors
The anaerobic blood culture (AN) bottle is routinely
used in Japan with little discussion as to its justification
or validity. We retrospectively studied the AN bottle
yield of obligate anaerobes and the characteristics
of, and potential risk factors in, patients with anaerobic
bacteremia during a 2-year period (1999–2000) at four
university hospitals and one community hospital.
Thirty-four of 18310 aerobic and anaerobic blood culture
sets from 6215 patients taken at the university
hospitals, and 35 of 2464 samples taken from 838
patients at the community hospital, yielded obligate
anaerobes. Bacteroides species and Clostridium
species accounted for 60% of the isolates. Fifty-seven
patients from 69 blood culture sets containing anaerobes
had clinically significant anaerobic bacteremia.
Among these 57 patients, 24 (49%) were oncology patients,
40 (70%) had an obvious source of anaerobic infection,
15 (26%) had recent surgery and/or were in an
immunosuppressed state. We concluded that the recovery
rate of obligate anaerobes isolated from AN
bottles was low, and the patients with anaerobic bacteremia
had limited number of underlying diseases or
potential risk factors for anaerobic infections. Therefore,
anaerobic blood cultures may be selectively used
according to the potential risk for anaerobic infections.
Clinical Chemical Laboratory Medicine, Walter de Gruyter
Print ISSN: 1434-6621
Volume: 41, 03/2003
Pages: 293 - 297
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