Your patient has a blood culture positive for Staphylococcus aureus – what do you do?
Journal article
Abstract:
Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia is an important clinical problem
associated with a high mortality rate and a significant burden on healthcare
resources. The severity, rate of complications, and prognosis of the infection
depend on a multitude of factors including underlying patient factors, the virulence
of the strain of S. aureus, and the timeliness of appropriate antibiotic therapy.
Detection of staphylococci in blood culture should trigger a chain of events
beginning with assessment of the patient to determine signs of sepsis and the likely
significance of the organism isolated. The level of risk of your patient having MRSA
must be assessed. A deep-seated source, or metastatic complication, of the
bacteraemia must be suspected and sought, with the most important complication
being endocarditis. This assessment should not delay urgent treatment with IV
antibiotic therapy in a patient with signs of sepsis. Treatment should be guided by
local antibiotic policy alongside advice from microbiology and/or infectious
diseases consultants.
This overview takes the form of a clinical case scenario with a step-wise approach
to the management of a patient from first isolation of staphylococci in a blood
culture to the management of MRSA endocarditis
Category:
Control
Management
Prevention