Clinical aspiration-related practice patterns in the intensive care unit: A physician survey

被引:29
作者
Rebuck, JA [1 ]
Rasmussen, JR [1 ]
Olsen, KM [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nebraska, Nebraska Med Ctr 986045, Dept Pharm Practice, Omaha, NE 68198 USA
关键词
critical care; intensive care; survey; aspiration; aspiration pneumonia; clinical aspiration; antibiotic; antimicrobial; microbiology; intensivist;
D O I
10.1097/00003246-200112000-00001
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
Objective., To characterize physician practice patterns regarding the clinical, microbiological, and antimicrobial-related events of suspected or documented aspiration and aspiration pneumonia within the intensive care unit. Design: National mail survey. Setting. University medical center. Study Population. Critical care physician members of the Society of Critical Care Medicine. Interventions: Survey questionnaire. Measurements and Main Results. The response rate was 645 (32%) of 2,000 mailed surveys; analysis of data represents completed questionnaires from 605 respondents. Intensivists (42.3%), pulmonologists (22.6%), and surgeons (21.6%) represent the majority of respondents. Altered level of consciousness (67.9%) in the intensive care unit was identified as the predominant predisposing factor for aspiration pneumonia. Sixty-four percent of physicians used sputum specimens, rather than protected specimen brushes or bronchoalveolar lavage, as the diagnostic source of bacterial cultures in cases of suspected aspiration pneumonia. Microbiological assessment of aspiration pneumonia revealed the absence of any predominant pathogen, although Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa were cited in 40.1% of combined responses, whereas anaerobes represented the fifth most prevalent cultured bacteria. In cases of suspected and confirmed aspiration, 51.9% and 77.7% of respondents, respectively, would prescribe an antimicrobial agent in the absence of a definitive infectious process, with administration of dual antimicrobial therapy increasing from 28.9% to 46.0% in suspected vs. confirmed cases of aspiration. In the treatment of aspiration pneumonia, 27.6% of physicians preferred pathogen-specific therapy, whereas the remainder (72.4%) selected an empirical antibiotic regimen based on prior clinical experience. Overall, a beta -lactam/beta -lactamase inhibitor, followed by a cephalosporin, aminoglycoside in combination, or clindamycin, was most often selected for empirical therapy of all defined aspiration-related clinical diagnoses. Conclusions. Our study revealed a divergent approach to antimicrobial treatment of cases of aspiration in the intensive care unit. Further investigation is warranted to determine why empirical antimicrobials are initiated frequently for noninfectious stages of aspiration.
引用
收藏
页码:2239 / 2244
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   Interprofessional Collaborative Practice in the Medical Intensive Care Unit: a Survey of Caregivers' Perspectives [J].
Chen, Debbie W. ;
Gerolamo, Angela M. ;
Harmon, Elissa ;
Bistline, Anna ;
Sicks, Shoshana ;
Collins, Lauren .
JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2018, 33 (10) :1708-1713
[22]   Regulation of pediatric intensive care unit nurse practitioner practice: A national survey [J].
Gigli, Kristin Hittle ;
Dietrich, Mary S. ;
Buerhaus, Peter I. ;
Minnick, Ann F. .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF NURSE PRACTITIONERS, 2018, 30 (01) :17-26
[23]   Swallowing screening practice patterns for nurses in the cardiac surgery intensive care unit [J].
Dallal York, Justine ;
Miller, Sarah ;
Chapin, Jennifer ;
Gore, Stephanie ;
Jeng, Eric I. ;
Plowman, Emily K. .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING, 2020, 29 (23-24) :4573-4582
[24]   Interprofessional Collaborative Practice in the Medical Intensive Care Unit: a Survey of Caregivers’ Perspectives [J].
Debbie W. Chen ;
Angela M. Gerolamo ;
Elissa Harmon ;
Anna Bistline ;
Shoshana Sicks ;
Lauren Collins .
Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2018, 33 :1708-1713
[25]   Intensive care unit physician staffing: Financial modeling of the Leapfrog standard [J].
Pronovost, PJ ;
Needham, DM ;
Waters, H ;
Birkmeyer, CM ;
Calinawan, JR ;
Birkmeyer, JD ;
Dorman, T .
CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2004, 32 (06) :1247-1253
[26]   Dual antiplatelet therapy and tracheostomy practice in the intensive care unit: a survey of selected urban ICUs in the UK [J].
Barnett, Nick ;
Thoppuram, Nithin ;
Seligman, William ;
Drebes, Anja .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA, 2025, 134 (02) :571-573
[27]   Clinical Management of Children with Oropharyngeal Aspiration - Physician Survey [J].
Dy, Fei Jamie ;
Midyat, Levent ;
Wong, Wai Y. ;
Haver, Kenan .
PEDIATRIC ALLERGY IMMUNOLOGY AND PULMONOLOGY, 2020, 33 (03) :142-146
[28]   Results of a survey on albumin use in clinical practice in intensive care units [J].
Estebanez-Montiel, M. B. ;
Quintana-Diaz, M. ;
de Lorenzo y Mateos, A. Garcia ;
Blancas Gomez-Casero, R. ;
Acosta-Escribano, J. ;
Marcos-Neira, P. .
MEDICINA INTENSIVA, 2014, 38 (07) :403-412
[29]   The intensive care unit visiting study: A multisite survey of visitors [J].
Kynoch, Kate ;
Coyer, Fiona ;
Mitchell, Marion ;
McArdle, Annie .
AUSTRALIAN CRITICAL CARE, 2021, 34 (06) :587-593
[30]   Ketamine sedation in the intensive care unit: a survey of Canadian intensivists [J].
Sharif, Sameer ;
Munshi, Laveena ;
Burry, Lisa ;
Mehta, Sangeeta ;
Gray, Sara ;
Chaudhuri, Dipayan ;
Duffett, Mark ;
Siemieniuk, Reed A. ;
Rochwerg, Bram .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF ANESTHESIA-JOURNAL CANADIEN D ANESTHESIE, 2024, 71 (01) :118-126