Bacteremia Due to Bacteroides fragilis after Elective Appendectomy in Renal Transplant Recipients
- 1 May 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Infectious Diseases
- Vol. 143 (5), 635-638
- https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/143.5.635
Abstract
Bacteremia caused by Bacteroides fragilis occurred in four of 75 children after renal transplantation, and B. fragilis was the most common cause of postoperative bacteremia. Bacteroides bacteremia was significantly associated with performance of elective appendectomy at the time of transplantation (P < 0.01) and with profound lymphocytopenia (P = 0.01). No patient received antibiotics at the time of surgery or prior to the first positive blood culture, yet B. fragilis was the single organism isolated from blood and abscesses in these patients. A role for lymphocytes in containment of B. fragilis has not been suggested previously, although unexplained occurrence of bacteroides bacteremia in immunocompromised patients has occasionally been reported. Lymphocytes themselves may be important in this host-bacterium interaction, or lymphocytopenia may be the marker for a more generalized deficiency in host defenses.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gram-Negative Rod Bacteremia: Microbiologic, Immunologic, and Therapeutic ConsiderationsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1977
- Bacteremic Bacteroides InfectionsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1970
- Listeriosis complicating lymphomaAmerican Journal Of Medicine, 1967