Mary M. Olson
University of Minnesota
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The Lancet | 1990
Stuart Johnson; Connie Clabots; F.V. Linn; Mary M. Olson; Lance R. Peterson; Dale N. Gerding
To assess the risk of acquiring Clostridium difficile diarrhoea or colitis in patients colonised with C difficile, rectal swabs taken weekly for 9 weeks from patients with long-term (at least 7 days) hospital stays on three wards were cultured for C difficile. 60 (21%) of 282 patients were culture-positive for C difficile during their hospital stay, of whom 51 were symptom-free faecal excretors. C difficile diarrhoea developed in the other 9 patients; 2 were culture-positive for C difficile and had diarrhoea at the time of first culture, and 7 had diarrhoea or pseudomembranous colitis after 1-6 previously negative weekly rectal cultures. All patients with diarrhoea were on one ward, but symptom-free, excretors were found on all wards. HindIII chromosomal restriction endonuclease analysis (REA) of the C difficile isolates revealed 18 distinct types. All isolates from the patients with diarrhoea were one of two nearly identical REA types, B or B2. 26 of the 29 total B/B2 isolates were from patients on the same ward, which points to a nosocomial outbreak. The symptom-free excretors were not at increased risk of subsequent clinical illness.
Infection Control and Hospital Epidemiology | 1994
Mary M. Olson; Carol J. Shanholtzer; James T. Lee; Dale N. Gerding
OBJECTIVES To understand the epidemiology, risks, and management of Clostridium difficile-associated disease (CDAD) and to establish and evaluate reliable methods of surveillance. DESIGN Case finding was done by daily ward and laboratory rounds. The criteria for CDAD diagnosis were: at least four unformed stools per day for 2 days and a positive culture or cytotoxin for C difficile, or positive endoscopy or autopsy for pseudomembranes. SETTING The surveillance covered all patients from 1982 through 1991 in the 820-bed Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Medical Center. PARTICIPANTS The criteria were met by 908 patients. Medical service patients numbered 488; surgical patients, 420. Frequencies ranged from a high of 149 cases in 1982 to a low of 50 cases in 1989. RESULTS Stool specimens were obtained on 898 (99%) of the 908 CDAD patients. Stools were culture-positive in 864 (96%) of 898, cytotoxin-positive in 569 (63%) of 898. Endoscopy was performed on 196 (22%) of the 908 patients, and 80 (41%) of 196 patients had pseudomembranes. Ten (1%) of the 908 patients were diagnosed by endoscopy without a stool specimen, or at autopsy. No treatment was needed for 135 (15%) of the 908 CDAD patients, and 19 (2%) of the 908 died before treatment was started. Oral metronidazole was the treatment for 632 (70%) of 908 patients (1% intolerance, 2% failure, 7% relapse) and oral vancomycin was given to 122 (13%) of 908 patients (1% intolerance, 1% failure, 10% relapse). Twelve patients had pseudomembranous colitis at autopsy, and it was the primary cause of death in 5 (0.6%) of 908. CONCLUSIONS CDAD usually responds to oral metronidazole or vancomycin but is nonetheless responsible for a high morbidity and occasional mortality in patients even when the diagnosis and treatment are pursued aggressively.
The American Journal of Medicine | 1990
Stuart Johnson; Dale N. Gerding; Mary M. Olson; Mary D. Weiler; Rita A. Hughes; Connie Clabots; Lance R. Peterson
PURPOSE Despite recognition that Clostridium difficile diarrhea/colitis is a nosocomial infection, the manner in which this organism is transmitted is still not clear. Hands of health care workers have been shown to be contaminated with C. difficile and suggested as a vehicle of transmission. Therefore, we conducted a controlled trial of the use of disposable vinyl gloves by hospital personnel for all body substance contact (prior to the institution of universal body substance precautions) to study its effect on the incidence of C. difficile disease. PATIENTS AND METHODS The incidence of nosocomial C. difficile diarrhea was monitored by active surveillance for six months before and after an intensive education program regarding glove use on two hospital wards. The interventions included initial and periodic in-services, posters, and placement of boxes of gloves at every patients bedside. Two comparable wards where no special intervention was instituted served as controls. RESULTS A decrease in the incidence of C. difficile diarrhea from 7.7 cases/1,000 patient discharges during the six months before intervention to 1.5/1,000 during the six months of intervention on the glove wards was observed (p = 0.015). No significant change in incidence was observed on the two control wards during the same period (5.7/1,000 versus 4.2/1,000). Point prevalence of asymptomatic C. difficile carriage was also reduced significantly on the glove wards but not on the control wards after the intervention period (glove wards, 10 of 37 to four of 43, p = 0.029; control wards, five of 30 to five of 49, p = 0.19). The cost of 61,500 gloves (4,505 gloves/100 patients) used was
Journal of Orthopaedic Research | 2002
Khaled J. Saleh; Mary M. Olson; Scott Resig; Boris Bershadsky; Michael A. Kuskowski; Terence J. Gioe; Harry Robinson; Richard Schmidt; Edward McElfresh
2,768 on the glove wards, compared with
Annals of Surgery | 1984
Mary M. Olson; Melody O'connor; Michael L. Schwartz
1,895 (42,100 gloves; 3,532 gloves/100 patients) on the control wards. CONCLUSIONS Vinyl glove use was associated with a reduced incidence of C. difficile diarrhea and is indirect evidence for hand carriage as a means of nosocomial C. difficile spread.
Gastroenterology | 1987
John I. Allen; Melody O'Connor Allen; Mary M. Olson; Dale N. Gerding; Carol J. Shanholtzer; Peter B. Meier; J.A. Vennes; Stephen E. Silvis
Background. Deep wound infection (DWI) in total knee (TKA) and total hip (THA) arthroplasty has been shown to highly correlate with superficial surgical site infection (SSSI). Although several studies have reported hospital factors that predispose to SSSI, patient factors have not been clearly elucidated.
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 1993
Mark S. Slaughter; Mary M. Olson; James T. Lee; Herbert B. Ward
This report describes a 5-year prospective study of postoperative wound sepsis utilizing a careful program of wound surveillance. Surgical wounds following 20,193 operations on all surgical services were surveyed by a trained nurse epidemiologist. Daily examination of wounds, culture of all suspicious wounds, and 30-day outpatient clinic follow-up were performed. Results were disseminated at monthly intervals to all involved surgeons and operating room personnel. Prospective and ongoing analysis of results facilitated identification and rectification of specific problem areas. Wound infection rates demonstrated a steady decline over the course of the study, overall rates dropping from 4.2% to 1.9% (p <0.05). This reduction in incidence of postoperative wound sepsis of 55% is estimated to have saved 2740 inhospital days and nearly
Urology | 1996
Robert C. Flanigan; Thomas C. McKay; Mary M. Olson; T. Vincent Shankey; Joseph Pyle; W. Bedford Waters
750,000.
The American Journal of Medicine | 1985
Roger L. Gebhard; Dale N. Gerding; Mary M. Olson; Lance R. Peterson; Craig J. McClain; Howard J. Ansel; Michael J. Shaw; Michael L. Schwartz
Pseudomonas aeruginosa was present in bile cultures from 10 patients who had undergone previous endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography in 1984. After environmental cultures and review of instrument disinfection, we traced the infections to a single endoscope contaminated with P. aeruginosa, serotype 10. Although the instrument had been cleaned repeatedly with an automatic endoscope cleaning machine, P. aeruginosa survived on residual moisture left in the channels of the endoscope. Contamination ended only after we began to manually suction alcohol through the endoscope before air drying. In 5 of 10 patients, P. aeruginosa caused clinical infections including gangrenous cholecystitis, abscesses, and death. We could identify no factor that distinguished symptomatic from asymptomatic patients. In asymptomatic patients, P. aeruginosa was recovered from gallbladder bile up to 2 mo after endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. As this P. aeruginosa epidemic was discovered retrospectively because we monitor bile cultures, we advocate this practice as part of endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography procedures.
Surgical Infections | 2000
Eugene S. Lee; Steven M. Santilli; Mary M. Olson; Michael A. Kuskowski; James T. Lee
Wound infections after coronary artery bypass operations have been continuously monitored at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Hospital for 15 years. All patients were followed up for 30 days. From 1977 to 1991, 2,402 coronary artery bypass operations were performed, and wound infections developed in 125 (5%) patients. There were 71 (3%) chest infections of which 33 (1.4%) were major and 38 (1.6%) superficial. Greater than 94% of these grew only a single organism, of which 74% were Staphylococcus species. There were 63 (2.6%) leg wound infections. More than 50% of these grew multiple organisms, of which 68% were enteric in origin. Nine (0.4%) patients had simultaneous chest and leg infections. Wound infections were diagnosed an average of 15.3 +/- 6.7 (range, 4 to 30) days postoperatively, with 50% occurring after discharge from the hospital. Of 14 variables evaluated by multivariate logistic regression analysis, only steroids (p = 0.005) and diabetes (p = 0.003) were identified as independent risk factors for wound infections. Patients taking steroids or with diabetes tended to have chest infections, whereas obese patients tended to have more leg infections (p = 0.08). During an interval in the surveillance program, a trend toward increasing infections was identified and successfully reversed.