Early bacterial infections in lung transplant recipients.

Early bacterial pulmonary infections within 2 weeks after lung transplantation were studied in 29 patients undergoing surgery between December 1989 and May 1992. Suspected pulmonary infections occurred in 11 patients (38 percent). The most common bacterial organisms isolated were Klebsiella pneumoniae (45 percent; 5/11), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (36 percent; 4/11), Escherichia coli (27 percent; 3/11), Staphylococcus aureus (18 percent; 2/11), and Enterobacter cloacae (18 percent; 2/11). The mortality due to infection was 3 percent (1/29) in the early postoperative period. None of the following variables was found to be of prognostic significance: positive donor cultures, ischemic time of the graft, use of cardiopulmonary bypass, number of courses of methylprednisolone for acute rejection, duration of postoperative intubation, and type of surgical procedure. The presence of infection in the early postoperative period did not influence long-term survival. In the absence of prognostic parameters, prompt adjustment of antibiotic therapy to the results of antibiograms remains the most important therapeutic step in the management of infections in the early postoperative period after lung transplantation.

[1]  W. Klepetko,et al.  One and One‐Half Year Experience with Unilateral and Bilateral Lung Transplantation , 1992, Journal of cardiac surgery.

[2]  F. Detterbeck,et al.  Isolated lung transplantation for end-stage lung disease: a viable therapy. , 1992, The Annals of thoracic surgery.

[3]  G. Berry,et al.  A working formulation for the standardization of nomenclature in the diagnosis of heart and lung rejection: Lung Rejection Study Group. The International Society for Heart Transplantation. , 1990, The Journal of heart transplantation.

[4]  W. Gibbons,et al.  Single lung transplantation for primary pulmonary hypertension. , 1990, Chest.

[5]  M. Hammond,et al.  A working formulation for the standardization of nomenclature in the diagnosis of heart and lung rejection: Heart Rejection Study Group. The International Society for Heart Transplantation. , 1990, The Journal of heart transplantation.

[6]  B. Griffith,et al.  Influence of the donor lung on development of early infections in lung transplant recipients. , 1990, The Journal of heart transplantation.

[7]  J. Dummer,et al.  Infectious complications in pulmonary allograft recipients. , 1990, Clinics in chest medicine.

[8]  G. Patterson,et al.  Results of single-lung transplantation for bilateral pulmonary fibrosis. The Toronto Lung Transplant Group. , 1990, The New England journal of medicine.

[9]  B. Griffith,et al.  Experimental donor-transmitted pneumonia in a model of canine orthotopic unilateral lung allotransplantation. , 1989, Current surgery.

[10]  B. Griffith,et al.  Infections in heart-lung transplant recipients. , 1986, Transplantation.

[11]  S. Eykyn,et al.  STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS TRANSMITTED IN TRANSPLANTED KIDNEYS , 1975, The Lancet.

[12]  Chang Dt,et al.  Survival of a patient transplanted with a kidney infected with Cryptococcus neoformans. , 1971 .

[13]  E. Gehan A GENERALIZED WILCOXON TEST FOR COMPARING ARBITRARILY SINGLY-CENSORED SAMPLES. , 1965, Biometrika.

[14]  E. Kaplan,et al.  Nonparametric Estimation from Incomplete Observations , 1958 .

[15]  C Washington Winn,et al.  Koneman's Color Atlas and Textbook of Diagnostic Microbiology , 1994 .

[16]  Unilateral lung transplantation for pulmonary fibrosis. , 1986, The New England journal of medicine.

[17]  E. Koneman Color atlas and textbook of diagnostic microbiology , 1983 .

[18]  W. Dixon,et al.  BMDP statistical software , 1983 .

[19]  R. McLeod,et al.  Probable transmission of Toxoplasma gondii by organ transplantation. , 1979, Annals of internal medicine.

[20]  O. Khoo,et al.  Survival of a patient transplanted with a kidney infected with Cryptococcus neoformans. , 1971, Transplantation.