High Rate of Candidemia in Patients Sustaining Injuries in a Bomb Blast at a Marketplace: A Possible Environmental Source
Author(s) -
Dana G. Wolf,
Itzhack Polacheck,
Colin Block,
Charles L. Sprung,
Michael MuggiaSullam,
Yehuda G. Wolf,
Arieh Oppenheim-Eden,
Avraham Rivkind,
Mervyn Shapiro
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
clinical infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.44
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1537-6591
pISSN - 1058-4838
DOI - 10.1086/314024
Subject(s) - medicine , multivariate analysis , intensive care unit , emergency medicine , sampling (signal processing) , cluster (spacecraft) , injury severity score , intensive care medicine , injury prevention , poison control , filter (signal processing) , computer science , computer vision , programming language
In this study, a cluster of candidemia among patients sustaining injuries in a bomb blast at a marketplace was investigated by means of a multivariate analysis, a case-control study, and quantitative air sampling. Candidemia occurred in 7 (30%) of 21 patients (58% of those admitted to the intensive care unit [ICU]) between 4 and 16 days (mean, 12 days) after the injury and was the single most frequent cause of bloodstream infections. Inhalation injury was the strongest predictor for candidemia by multivariate analysis. Candidemia among the case patients occurred at a significantly higher rate than among comparable trauma patients injured in different urban settings, including a pedestrian mall (2 of 29; P=. 02), and among contemporary ICU control patients (1 of 40; P=.001). Air sampling revealed exclusive detection of Candida species and increased mold concentration in the market in comparison with the mall environment. These findings suggest a role for an exogenous, environmental source in the development of candidemia in some trauma patients.
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