Abstract
Although bacteria from both the ventilator breathing system and the gastrointestinal tract have been implicated in the pathogenesis of ventilator-associated pneumonia, an endogenous source of bacteria in the proximal respiratory breathing system has yet to be demonstrated conclusively. We investigated a potential route of bacterial colonization from the stomach contents to the efferent limb of the ventilator breathing system by bacterial culture of daily specimens from six sites in 20 surgical intensive care patients. Gram-negative bacilli were isolated in a progressively increasing proportion of samples at successive sampling points, consistent with an endogenous-to-external route of spread (patients, chi-square = 14.12, P < 0.02; samples, chi-square = 106.15, P < 0.001). Identical strains of gram-negative bacilli, confirmed by REPS typing, were found at two or more sites in seven patients. In all seven, gram-negative bacilli were first isolated from a site in the patient. In none of the 20 patients was there evidence of a sequence of colonization from the ventilator tubing or Y-piece connector towards the patient. Probable colonization sequences plotted from the time of first isolation supported the proposed sequence in six patients, and in five began with the stomach contents. Isolation sequences contrary to the proposed direction of colonization involved four bacterial species and two patients, and did not extend beyond two sample sites. These findings imply that the retrograde route of bacterial colonization of the ventilated lung extends into the proximal respiratory breathing system and may help to identify additional targets for preventive intervention.
Published Version
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