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Vol. 16. Issue 1.
Pages 63-67 (January - February 2012)
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Vol. 16. Issue 1.
Pages 63-67 (January - February 2012)
Open Access
Gram-negative osteomyelitis: clinical and microbiological profile
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Vladimir Cordeiro de Carvalho
Corresponding author
vladimir.carvalho@yahoo.com

Corresponding author at: Rua Doutor Ovídio Pires de Campos, 333/311A, 05403-010, São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
, Priscila Rosalba Domingos de Oliveira, Karine Dal-Paz, Adriana Pereira de Paula, Cássia da Silva Félix, Ana Lúcia Lei Munhoz Lima
Institute of Orthopedics and Traumatology, Hospital das Clínicas, School of Medicine, Universidade de São Paulo, SP, Brazil
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Abstract
Introduction

Despite the growing interest in the study of Gram-negative bacilli (GNB) infections, very little information on osteomyelitis caused by GNB is available in the medical literature.

Objectives and methods

: To assess clinical and microbiological features of 101 cases of osteomyelitis caused by GNB alone, between January 2007 and January 2009, in a reference center for the treatment of high complexity traumas in the city of São Paulo.

Results

Most patients were men (63%), with median age of 42 years, affected by chronic osteomyelitis (43%) or acute osteomyelitis associated to open fractures (32%), the majority on the lower limbs (71%). The patients were treated with antibiotics as inpatients for 40 days (median) and for 99 days (median) in outpatient settings. After 6 months follow-up, the clinical remission rate was around 60%, relapse 19%, amputation 7%, and death 5%. Nine percent of cases were lost to follow-up. A total of 121 GNB was isolated from 101 clinical samples. The most frequently isolated pathogens were Enterobacter sp. (25%), Acinetobacter baumannii (21%) e Pseudomonas aeruginosa (20%). Susceptibility to carbapenems was about 100% for Enterobacter sp., 75% for Pseudomonas aeruginosa and 60% for Acinetobacter baumannii.

Conclusion

Osteomyelitis caused by GNB remains a serious therapeutic challenge, especially when associated to nonfermenting bacteria. We emphasize the need to consider these agents in diagnosed cases of osteomyelitis, so that an ideal antimicrobial treatment can be administered since the very beginning of the therapy.

Keywords:
Osteomyelitis
Fractures, open
Gram-negative bacterial infections
Accidents, traffic
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The Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases
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