Summary
Bacteremia has a high mortality rate in all elderly populations, but especially nursing home residents and the hospitalized elderly. Elderly patients with bacteremia may present in a nonspecific fashion with incontinence, with falls, or afebrile. Mortality is greater in patients whose bacteremia originates outside the genitourinary tract or who are bacteremic with gram-positive organisms. Early appropriate treatment has been found to reduce mortality in some studies, especially in patients over 85 years old or with gram-positive bacteremias.
Gram-negative bacteremias are more common than those caused by gram-positive organisms in most studies.E. coli is the most common gram-negative isolate, followed in most studies by either Proteus or Klebsiella. Staphylococcus aureus is the most common gram-positive isolate; enterococcus and pneumococcus are also frequently isolated.
Bacteremia in the elderly may present in a subtle fashion. Appropriate antibiotic therapy may reduce mortality and should include antibiotic coverage forS. aureus and gram-negative bacilli, as well as for anaerobes if pressure ulcers are suspected as the source. Clinicians who care for the elderly should be aware of the possible presentations of bacteremia and the appropriate treatment in all clinical settings.
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Received from the Department of Family Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, and the Deaton Hospital and Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland.
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Richardson, J.P. Bacteremia in the elderly. J Gen Intern Med 8, 89–92 (1993). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02599992
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02599992