Emerging Infectious Diseases (Aug 2003)

Pseudomonas aeruginosa and the Oropharyngeal Ecosystem of Tube-Fed Patients

  • Arthur Leibovitz,
  • Michael Dan,
  • Jonathan Zinger,
  • Yehuda Carmeli,
  • Beni Habot,
  • Rephael Segal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid0908.030054
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
pp. 956 – 959

Abstract

Read online

We evaluated whether elderly patients fed with nasogastric tubes (NGT) are predisposed to Pseudomonas aeruginosa colonization in the oropharynx. Fifty-three patients on NGT feeding and 50 orally fed controls with similar clinical characteristics were studied. The tongue dorsum was swabbed and cultured. P. aeruginosa was isolated in 18 (34%) of the NGT-fed group but in no controls (p<0.001). Other gram-negative bacteria were cultured from 34 (64%) of NGT-fed patients as compared with 4 (8%) of controls (p<0.001). Antibiotic susceptibility of the oropharyngeal P. aeruginosa isolates was compared with that of isolates from sputum cultures obtained from our hospital’s bacteriologic laboratory. The oropharyngeal isolates showed a higher rate of resistance; differences were significant for amikacin (p<0.03). Scanning electron microscope studies showed a biofilm containing P. aeruginosa organisms. The pulsed-field gel electrophoresis profile of these organisms was similar to that of P. aeruginosa isolates from the oropharynx. NGT-fed patients may serve as vectors of resistant P. aeruginosa strains.

Keywords