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40069

Effect of Culture Technique on the Work Up in cirrhotic Patients with Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis

Article

Last updated: 04 Jan 2025

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Tags

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Abstract

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is a serious complication in patients with advance liver cirrhosis and is associated with significant mortality. Multidrug resistance is an evolving problem in management of SBP. Therefore, early diagnosis and proper selection of antimicrobial therapy are warranted.                                             
Objective: Assessment of the accuracy of conventional culture compared to blood culture in diagnosis of SBP and evaluation the role of blood culture in selection of antimicrobial therapy for treatment of SBP.                            
Methods: One hundred unselected consecutive cirrhotic patients with moderate or severe ascitis who were admitted to Internal Medicine Department during the period from October 2016 to April 2017 were included. Diagnostic aspiration of the ascetic fluid was made for each patient. The aspirated samples underwent chemical and cytological analysis as well as inoculation on conventional culture and on blood culture. Positive growths were tested for antibiotic sensitivity.                                                                                               
Results: 47 patients (47%) among the 100 cirrhotic patients had spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Positive growths were detected in 11 patients (23.4%) and in 32(68.1%) patients by using conventional culture and blood culture respectively. By using blood culture as gold stander, the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value and negative predictive value of conventional culture were 34.38%, 100%, 100% and 41.67% respectively. All isolated growths were sensitive to meropenem. Resistance to cefotaxime was detected in 20 cases (62.5%). Other tested drugs showed variable degrees of sensitivity.                                                                                                                                                               
Conclusion: Conventional culture is of low sensitivity in diagnosis of SBP among cirrhotic patients and blood culture should be considered the gold standard for diagnosis of SBP. Multidrug resistance in SBP is common and antibiotic selection should be based on culture and sensitivity tests.

DOI

10.21608/smj.2017.40069

Keywords

Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis, Blood Culture, multidrug resistance

Authors

First Name

Osama

Last Name

Arafa

MiddleName

Ahmed

Affiliation

Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Sohag University

Email

usama_morssy@med.sohag.edu.eg

City

Sohag

Orcid

-

First Name

Mahmoud

Last Name

Elsamman

MiddleName

Kamal

Affiliation

Department of Internal medicine , Faculty of Midicine,Sohag University.

Email

mahmoud_elsaman@med.sohag.edu.eg

City

sohag

Orcid

-

First Name

Laila

Last Name

Yousef

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Department of Clinical and Chemical pathology, Faculty of Medicine, Sohag University

Email

lailamohamed@med.sohag.edu.eg

City

Sohag

Orcid

-

First Name

Abdalla

Last Name

Mohammed

MiddleName

Rashad

Affiliation

Department of Internal Medicine Faculty of Medicine, Sohag University

Email

-

City

Sohag

Orcid

-

First Name

Ali

Last Name

Kassem

MiddleName

mahmoud

Affiliation

Department of Internal Medicine Faculty of Medicine, Sohag University

Email

ali_kassem@med.sohag.edu.eg

City

Sohag

Orcid

-

Volume

21

Article Issue

3

Related Issue

4803

Issue Date

2017-10-01

Receive Date

2017-08-25

Publish Date

2017-10-01

Page Start

729

Page End

285

Print ISSN

1687-8353

Online ISSN

2682-4159

Link

https://smj.journals.ekb.eg/article_40069.html

Detail API

https://smj.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=40069

Order

33

Type

Original Article

Type Code

785

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Sohag Medical Journal

Publication Link

https://smj.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Effect of Culture Technique on the Work Up in cirrhotic Patients with Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023