HAP prevention for nonventilated adults in acute care: Can a structured oral care program reduce infection incidence?

L. Talley, J. Lamb, J. Harl, H. Lorenz, L. Green
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

ospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) has become a costly and dangerous healthcare issue. An estimated 200,000 cases of aspiration pneumonia occur every year in the United States, resulting in more than 15,000 deaths.1 HAP causes unnecessary patient suffering, mortality as high as 20% to 30%, and significantly increased length and cost of hospital stay.2,3 As reported by the American Thoracic Society and the Infectious Diseases Society of America, treatment of HAP costs approximately $40,000 per patient.4 Most of this incidence and outcome information is collected from patients with ventilatorassociated pneumonia (VAP). By deduction, information regarding VAP can be applied to patients with HAP.4 Given that HAP is one of the most common hospital-acquired infections, evidence-based prevention could save the healthcare industry several billion dollars annually.5 Relation between HAP and dental health Considerable evidence supports a relation between poor oral health and bacterial pneumonia. In a systematic review of evidence for an association between oral health and pneumonia, experts found that cariogenic and periodontal pathogens, dental decay, and poor oral hygiene are potential risk factors for pneumonia.6 In addition, poor oral hygiene has been linked to significant increases in the numbers of febrile days and cases of pneumonia.7 Specifically, dental plaque is composed of a complex population of more than 700 different bacterial species.8 Poor dental hygiene can result in continual bacterial cell growth and increased bacterial diversity within dental plaque. Without proper dental hygiene, dental plaque may serve as a reservoir for respiratory pathogens in hospitalized patients. Matching organisms have been found in dental plaque and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from patients with HAP, implicating aspiration of organisms within dental plaque as the etiology of HAP in these patients.9 This is thought to occur via a mechanism in which aspirated respiratory pathogens shed HAP prevention for nonventilated adults in acute care Can a structured oral care program reduce infection incidence?
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急性护理中不通气成人的HAP预防:结构化口腔护理方案能否降低感染发生率?
医院获得性肺炎(HAP)已成为一个代价高昂且危险的医疗保健问题。据估计,美国每年发生20万例吸入性肺炎,导致1.5万多人死亡HAP造成患者不必要的痛苦,死亡率高达20%至30%,并显著增加住院时间和费用。据美国胸科学会和美国传染病学会报道,HAP的治疗费用约为每位患者40,000美元这些发病率和结局信息大多来自呼吸机相关性肺炎(VAP)患者。由此推断,关于VAP的信息可以应用于HAP患者。4鉴于HAP是最常见的医院获得性感染之一,基于证据的预防可以每年为医疗保健行业节省数十亿美元相当多的证据支持口腔健康不良与细菌性肺炎之间的关系。在对口腔健康与肺炎相关证据的系统回顾中,专家发现,龋齿和牙周病原体、蛀牙和口腔卫生不良是肺炎的潜在危险因素此外,不良的口腔卫生与发热天数和肺炎病例的显著增加有关具体来说,牙菌斑是由700多种不同的细菌组成的复杂种群不良的口腔卫生会导致牙菌斑内持续的细菌细胞生长和细菌多样性增加。如果没有适当的口腔卫生,牙菌斑可能成为住院患者呼吸道病原体的储存库。在HAP患者的牙菌斑和支气管肺泡灌洗液中发现了匹配的微生物,暗示牙菌斑内的微生物吸入是这些患者HAP的病因这被认为是通过一种机制发生的,在这种机制中,吸入性呼吸道病原体脱落HAP预防急性护理中不通气的成年人,结构化的口腔护理计划能降低感染发生率吗?
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