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Yersinia Enterocolitica Infections inHospitalized Patients The Problem of Hospital-AcquiredInfections

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 June 2016

Constance G. Cannon*
Affiliation:
Infection Control Department, University of Cincinnati Hospital, and Departments of Medicine, Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, and Environmental Health, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio
Calvin C. Linnemann Jr.
Affiliation:
Infection Control Department, University of Cincinnati Hospital, and Departments of Medicine, Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, and Environmental Health, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio
*
Infection Control Department, University of Cincinnati Hospital, 234 Goodman Street, Cincinnati, OH45267-0788

Abstract

Objective:

To study the epidemiology of Yersinia enterocolitica infections in hospitalized patients and to determine the frequency of hospital-acquired infection and the modes of transmission within the hospital.

Design:

Descriptive study in which the clinical microbiology laboratory reported all positive Yersinia cultures to the infection control department; each case was investigated to determine the source of infection.

Setting:

A 700-bed university teaching hospital.

Participants:

All patients who were culture-positive for Y enterocolitica after admission to the University of Cincinnati Hospital during the 4-year period between 1987 and 1990.

Results:

Of 18 patients who were diagnosed with Yersinia infections, 8 (44%) were community-acquired. These patients were admitted with gastrointestinal symptoms and had their first positive cultures between days 1 and 5 of their hospitalizations. Five patients (28%) had hospital-acquired infections, having developed diarrhea after admission for unrelated problems, and became culture-positive between days 18 and 66. The remaining 5 patients could not be classified as either community- or hospital-acquired. These patients had gastrointestinal symptoms at the time of admission, but these could have been explained by other diseases. Their first positive stool cultures were not obtained until the second week or later during hospitalization, and 3 of these patients had negative stool cultures prior to a positive culture.

Conclusions:

Although Y enterocolitica has not previously been recognized as a common hospital problem, at least 28% of our patients acquired their Yersinia infections in the hospital. In some cases, cross infections, transmitted by healthcare workers, occurred between patients. Four of the 18 infections occurred in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America 1992 

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