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© 1993 Oxford University Press

research-article

Bloodstream Infections in Patients Older than Eighty Years

LEONARD LEIBOVICI, SILVIO D. PITLIK, HANNA KONISBERGER and MOSHE DRUCKER

Internal Medicine Department B, Beilinson Medical Centre 49 100 Petach Tiqva, Israel
Infectious Diseases Unit, Beilinson Medical Centre and the Sackler Faculty of Medicine, University of Tel Aviv Ramat Aviv, Israel

During a period of 3 years in a University Hospital in Israel, 339 episodes of bacteraemia were observed in patients 80 years of age or older, and 658 episodes in patients 60–79 years of age. Patients older than 80 were more often residents of nursing homes, frequently had a history of a cerebrovascular accident, but were less often neutropenic. Twenty-four per cent of bacteraemia episodes in the very old were hospital acquired compared with 40% in the old patients. The most common source of bacteraemia was the urinary tract, 50% of episodes in the very old, and 34% of episodes in the old.

The percentage of episodes in which anaerobic bacteria were isolated was 5% in the very old and 1% in the old, and the difference was significant when corrected for the sources of bacteraemia. All cases of community-acquired bacterial endocarditis in patients of 80 or over were caused by pathogens originating from the gut.

Thirty-five per cent of patients of 80 and over and 30% of patients aged 60–79 years died during hospitalization. Fatality was not associated with advanced age in the very old. Factors significantly and independently associated with fatality in both groups were a hospital-acquired infection, shock, low serum albumin, renal dysfunction and inappropriate antibiotic treatment.

Received March 9, 1993;
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