I wanted to talk about the management of Staphylococcus Aureus Bacteremia. There is a good article here on the management of MRSA bacteremia.
- Never treat staphylococcus aureus in the blood as a contaminant. Like fungus in the blood, this always needs to be treated!
- The *minimum* treatment duration is 14 days (intravenous). This is for uncomplicated infections only.
- Risk factors for complication:
- Longer duration of illness
- Community acquired infection
- Persistent fever at 72h (OR 2)
- Persistent positive blood culture at 96h (OR 5)
- Hemodialysis patients
- Indwelling lines or other prosthetic material
- MRSA
- No identifiable source for the bacteremia (i.e. no skin or line focus)
- Blood cultures positive within 14 hours of drawing them
- Risk factors for complication:
- You need to exclude bacterial endocarditis. Present in 10-13% of cases...
- TEE is much more sensitive than TTE for making this diagnosis (103 patients with SA -- TEE dx endocarditis in 25%, TTE only found 7%). In patients for whom you are planning 14d therapy (particularly those who have risk factors for complication) you should probably not rely on a TTE to exclude IE.
- Can also cause pacemaker and AICD infections
- Vertebral osteomyelitis
- Septic arthritis
- Splenic abscess (persistant fever, LUQ pain)
- Septic thrombophlebitis (particularly with lines)
- Septic pulmonary emboli
- Brain abscess/meningitis/mycotic aneurysms
- Skin/soft tissue abscesses
Treatment:
- Ideal treatment for MSSA is with a beta-lactam like cloxacillin or cefazolin. These are superior head to head with vancomycin for the treatment of MSSA.
- Removable foci should be removed if feasible and practical to do so
- Duration depends on complications. IE 4-6 weeks. Osteo ~6 weeks.
- 20 to 40%!
- Age
- MRSA (OR 9.3)
- Blood cultures positive less than 12 hours (OR 7)
- Complication (OR 9)
In medicine we often attempt to find one unifying diagnosis that explains all symptoms -- in satisfying what is known as Occam's Razor.
The important teaching point in a complicated case like this is that the patient may have multiple diagnoses and that we must keep an open mind. In response to Occam's Razor, Hickam's Dictum states that "[the patient] can have as many diseases as the damn well please".
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