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Dialysis-Related Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis
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Dialysis-Related Spontaneous Bacterial Peritonitis
See Also
Peritoneal Dialysis
Incidence
Once in 15 patient-months of
Peritoneal Dialysis
Causes
Complication of
Peritoneal Dialysis
Common
Staphylococcus
epidermidis (most common)
Staphylococcus aureus
Gram-negative bowel flora
Other
Pseudomonas
aeruginosa
Candida
Tuberculosis
Anaerobe
s
Risk Factors
Immunocompromised
state
Frequent daily dialysate exchanges
Biofilm formation
Hot and humid weather
Symptoms
Abdominal Pain
Fever
Vomiting
Signs
Acute Abdomen
with peritoneal signs may be present
Labs
Complete Blood Count
Blood Culture
s
Dialysate culture
Cultures typically grow
Gram Positive
skin flora as well as
Gram Negative Bacteria
Other infections include candida, Tb or
Anaerobe
s
Dilaysate exam and
Gram Stain
Cloudy dialysate
Dialysate exam with >100 white cells and >50% PMNs
Management
Start with repeated multiple rapid dialysate fluid exchanges
Use
Heparin
500 units/Liter dialysate with intraperitoneal
Antibiotic
Continue
Antibiotic
s for 7 to 14 days
First-line Intraperitoneal
Antibiotic
Cephalothin 200-500 mg/L of dialysate intraperitoneal or
Gentamicin
8 mg/L of dialysate intraperitoneal followed by 4 mg/L subsequent intraperitoneal infusions
Pretreat with
Gentamicin
IM or IV
MRSA
suspected:
Vancomycin
IV and intraperitoneal (VRE risk)
Vancomycin
15-25 mg/kg/L of dialysate intraperitoneal
Pre-administer
Vancomycin
1 gram IV load
Gram-Negative Bacteria
suspected:
Ceftazidime
AND
Aztreonam
Ceftazidime
1 gram IV or intraperitoneal AND
Aztreonam
3 grams IV or intraperitoneal
Failure to improve
Consider peritoneal catheter removal (consult with patient's nephrologist first)
Consider adding
Fluconazole
if fungal infection suspected
References
Campana (2014) Crit Dec Emerg Med 28(4): 2-8
Glauser (2013) Crit Dec Emerg Med 27(10): 2-12
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