Chapter 26: Surgical Infection- Central Line Infections Flashcards

1
Q

What are the signs of a central line infection?

A
  • Unexplained hyperglycemia
  • fever
  • mental status change
  • hypotension,tachycardia → shock
  • pus and erythema at central line site
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2
Q

What is a central line–associated bloodstream infection (CLABSI)?

A
  • Central line in place >2 days
  • +Blood culture
  • No other source of infection
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3
Q

What is the most common cause of “catheter-related bloodstream infections”?

A

Coagulase-negative staphylococci (33%), followed by enterococci, S. aureus,gram-negative rods

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4
Q

When should central lines be changed?

A

When they are infected; there is NO advantage to changing them every 7 days in nonburn patients

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5
Q

What central line infusion increases the risk of infection?

A

Hyperal (TPN)

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6
Q

What is the treatment for central line infection?

A
  1. Remove central line (send for culture) ± IV antibiotics
  2. Place NEW central line in a different site
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7
Q

When should peripheral IV short angiocatheters be changed?

A

Every 72 to 96 hours

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