0000000000668708

AUTHOR

Cinzia Auriti

0000-0001-9820-6557

showing 3 related works from this author

Invasive candida infections in neonates after major surgery: Current evidence and new directions

2021

Infections represent a serious health problem in neonates. Invasive Candida infections (ICIs) are still a leading cause of mortality and morbidity in neonatal intensive care units (NICUs). Infants hospitalized in NICUs are at high risk of ICIs, because of several risk factors: broad spectrum antibiotic treatments, central catheters and other invasive devices, fungal colonization, and impaired immune responses. In this review we summarize 19 published studies which provide the prevalence of previous surgery in neonates with invasive Candida infections. We also provide an overview of risk factors for ICIs after major surgery, fungal colonization, and innate defense mechanisms against fungi, a…

0301 basic medicineMicrobiology (medical)Antifungalmedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.drug_classInvasive Candida infections030106 microbiologylcsh:MedicineInvasive Candida infectionCandida infections03 medical and health sciencesBroad spectrumNeonatal surgeryinvasive <i>Candida</i> infections0302 clinical medicineInvasive fungal infectionInvasive fungal infectionsIntensive careEpidemiologyFungal colonizationImmunology and AllergyMedicineAntifungal prophylaxi030212 general & internal medicineMolecular BiologyNewbornsGeneral Immunology and Microbiologybusiness.industrylcsh:RImpaired immune responsesNewbornSurgeryNeonatal surgeryInfectious DiseasesSettore MED/20SurgeryAntifungal prophylaxisAntifungal prophylaxis; Invasive Candida infections; Invasive fungal infections; Neonatal surgery; Newborns; Surgerybusiness
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Serratia marcescens infection or hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy in neonates: Is magnetic resonance imaging a problem-solving tool?

2017

To the Editor: We read with great interest the retrospective case series by A Madide and J Smith,[1] describing brain ultrasound (US) findings of neonates with Serratia marcescens hospital-acquired infections. S. marcescens is a Gram-negative organism that frequently colonises neonatal intensive care units (NICUs). This bacterium can cause severe brain infections in neonates, with irreversible neurological damage and long-term neurodevelopmental impairment. The authors conclude that in babies with acute onset of the illness, US scans allow doctors to highlight pathological changes in the brain immediately before the microbiological diagnosis of infection, and to follow the evolution of thos…

lcsh:R5-920medicine.medical_specialtymedicine.diagnostic_testbiologybusiness.industrylcsh:Rlcsh:MedicineMagnetic resonance imagingGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationHypoxic ischaemic encephalopathyAcute onsetNeurological DamageIntensive careBrain ultrasoundSerratia marcescensmedicinelcsh:Medicine (General)Intensive care medicinebusinessPathologicalSouth African medical journal = Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir geneeskunde
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Surgical Antimicrobial Prophylaxis in Abdominal Surgery for Neonates and Paediatrics: A RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method Consensus Study.

2022

Surgical site infections (SSIs), i.e., surgery-related infections that occur within 30 days after surgery without an implant and within one year if an implant is placed, complicate surgical procedures in up to 10% of cases, but an underestimation of the data is possible since about 50% of SSIs occur after the hospital discharge. Gastrointestinal surgical procedures are among the surgical procedures with the highest risk of SSIs, especially when colon surgery is considered. Data that were collected from children seem to indicate that the risk of SSIs can be higher than in adults. This consensus document describes the use of preoperative antibiotic prophylaxis in neonates and children that ar…

Microbiology (medical)Infectious Diseasespancreas surgerySettore MED/41 - ANESTESIOLOGIAPharmacology (medical)General Pharmacology Toxicology and Pharmaceuticsabdominal surgerygastrointestinal endoscopyBiochemistryMicrobiologyabdominal surgery; appendectomy; gastrointestinal endoscopy; liver surgery; pancreas surgeryappendectomyliver surgery
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