P-752. Prevalence and risk factors for bacterial resistance in infections in hospitalized burn patients in a referral hospital in Nicaragua
Marvin Castro-Averruz, Kevin Gavarrete-Rivas, Sunaya Marenco-Avilés, Guillermo D Porras-Cortés, Kevin A Sandoval-Rojas

TL;DR
This study examines bacterial resistance in hospitalized burn patients in Nicaragua, identifying risk factors and clinical outcomes.
Contribution
The study identifies specific risk factors and clinical outcomes associated with drug-resistant bacterial infections in burn patients in Nicaragua.
Findings
66% of patients had infections with at least one resistant bacteria, with Gram-negative bacteria being the most prevalent.
Key risk factors include central venous catheter use, referral from another healthcare unit, elevated neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio, and recent antibiotic use.
Drug-resistant infections were associated with significant resistance to quinolones, ESBL production, and carbapenem resistance.
Abstract
Infection is the leading cause of death and morbidity following burn injury. The bacterial resistance has a negative impact on the clinical outcomes of these patients. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence, the main risk factors, and clinical outcomes for patients with infected burn caused by bacteria that were resistant to different classes of antimicrobials in a hospital in Nicaragua.Figure 1.Prevalence of bacteria resistant to different classes of antibiotics in patients with infected burnTable 1.Associated factor and clinical outcome related with bacterial resistance in patients with infected burns Prevalence of bacteria resistant to different classes of antibiotics in patients with infected burn Associated factor and clinical outcome related with bacterial resistance in patients with infected burns A case-control study was conducted between January 2021 and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBurn Injury Management and Outcomes · Wound Healing and Treatments · Nosocomial Infections in ICU
