ID- OSCE - Equipment - VRE Flashcards
What is VRE
Vancomycin resistant enterococcus
Bacterial strain of Enterococcus
Enterococci are part of normal flora in gut
Some are naturally vanc resistant. Others acquire this resistance by plasmids and transposons
People are colonised in health and disease.
In hospital - contact with hospital/staff, contaminated surfaces, poor handwashing
What infections can VRE cause
Catheter related bloodstream infections CRBSI
Wound infection
UTI
Bacteraemia
Management of a new VRE
Identify the source and control it.
Abx
Isolate the patient.
Treat the source - could is be an infected line, valve? Wound?
Abx - linezolid
Also - daptomycin, tigecycline, teicoplanin
Prevention strategies - isolation, hand washing, barrier nursing, sofap and water
What is a CRBSI and a CLASBI
CRBSI - Catheter Related
CLASBI - Central line ASSOICATED
CRBSI - blood stream infection attributed to IV line
CLASBI - blood stream infection who had a central line within a 48 hour period before the infection
CRBSI - determined by quant culture of catheter tip.
OR by differences in growth between tip and peripheral blood
Identifying CRBSI
Clinical suspicions - spiking temps where chest/urine etc ruled out
Site infectionm, VIP
Lab - raised inflammatory marker, positive cultures
Positive tip cultures
Paired cultures with CVC is 5:1 versus peripheral
OR
Non quant - CVC tip tests positive 2 hours prior to paired peripheral
Management of CRBSI
REMOVE THE LINE
Empirical Abx - usually MRSA
Prevention of CRBSI
Bundles
Surveillance
Early removal once they aren’t needed
What’s in a bundle
Strict aseptic insertion
2% chlorhex
Avoid the femoral site
What’s in a central line to prevent CRBSI
Anti-biotic impregnated catheter e.g rifampicin
Silver/chlorhex