Ventriculo-Peritoneal Shunt Infections in Infants and Children

Objective: To determine the rate and the type of ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt infections in infants and children admitted to King Fahad Hofuf hospital of Al-Ahsaa area at the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia.Methods: From mid 2003 to end of 2006; VP shunt infection episodes were reviewed. Once in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kamal HM, Bokhary MM. Aly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2008-01-01
Series:Libyan Journal of Medicine
Subjects:
CSF
Online Access:http://www.ljm.org.ly/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1296
id doaj-d7aff76e0e094a8d820ad23c3f73059e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d7aff76e0e094a8d820ad23c3f73059e2020-11-25T02:27:34ZengTaylor & Francis GroupLibyan Journal of Medicine1819-63572008-01-0131AOP:080104Ventriculo-Peritoneal Shunt Infections in Infants and ChildrenKamal HMBokhary MM. AlyObjective: To determine the rate and the type of ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt infections in infants and children admitted to King Fahad Hofuf hospital of Al-Ahsaa area at the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia.Methods: From mid 2003 to end of 2006; VP shunt infection episodes were reviewed. Once infection was suspected, a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) sample was taken and empirical antibiotics were recommended. Once infection was confirmed, VP shunt was removed and external ventricular drainage (EVD) was inserted until CSF became sterile after which a new shunt was inserted.Results: 25.9% of patients with VP shunts had infections which represents 29.3% of the procedures. 40% of infected patients had recurrent episodes. 59.1% of infections occurred throughout the first two months following insertion. Single pathogen was isolated in each episode. Pseudomonas auerginosa represented 50% of isolated pathogens compared with 18.2% with Staphylococcus epidermidis.Conclusions There is a high incidence of VP shunt infections in King Fahad Hofuf hospital when compared with other international centres. Gram negative organisms are the most common cause of the infection. http://www.ljm.org.ly/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1296shuntinfectionsCSFventriculoperitonealinfantschildren
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kamal HM
Bokhary MM. Aly
spellingShingle Kamal HM
Bokhary MM. Aly
Ventriculo-Peritoneal Shunt Infections in Infants and Children
Libyan Journal of Medicine
shunt
infections
CSF
ventriculoperitoneal
infants
children
author_facet Kamal HM
Bokhary MM. Aly
author_sort Kamal HM
title Ventriculo-Peritoneal Shunt Infections in Infants and Children
title_short Ventriculo-Peritoneal Shunt Infections in Infants and Children
title_full Ventriculo-Peritoneal Shunt Infections in Infants and Children
title_fullStr Ventriculo-Peritoneal Shunt Infections in Infants and Children
title_full_unstemmed Ventriculo-Peritoneal Shunt Infections in Infants and Children
title_sort ventriculo-peritoneal shunt infections in infants and children
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Libyan Journal of Medicine
issn 1819-6357
publishDate 2008-01-01
description Objective: To determine the rate and the type of ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt infections in infants and children admitted to King Fahad Hofuf hospital of Al-Ahsaa area at the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia.Methods: From mid 2003 to end of 2006; VP shunt infection episodes were reviewed. Once infection was suspected, a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) sample was taken and empirical antibiotics were recommended. Once infection was confirmed, VP shunt was removed and external ventricular drainage (EVD) was inserted until CSF became sterile after which a new shunt was inserted.Results: 25.9% of patients with VP shunts had infections which represents 29.3% of the procedures. 40% of infected patients had recurrent episodes. 59.1% of infections occurred throughout the first two months following insertion. Single pathogen was isolated in each episode. Pseudomonas auerginosa represented 50% of isolated pathogens compared with 18.2% with Staphylococcus epidermidis.Conclusions There is a high incidence of VP shunt infections in King Fahad Hofuf hospital when compared with other international centres. Gram negative organisms are the most common cause of the infection.
topic shunt
infections
CSF
ventriculoperitoneal
infants
children
url http://www.ljm.org.ly/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1296
work_keys_str_mv AT kamalhm ventriculoperitonealshuntinfectionsininfantsandchildren
AT bokharymmaly ventriculoperitonealshuntinfectionsininfantsandchildren
_version_ 1724842258840158208