Clinical Study
Eye (2006) 20, 447–454. doi:10.1038/sj.eye.6701899; published online 29 April 2005
Influence of age on conjunctival bacteria of patients undergoing cataract surgery
E F Rubio1
1Ophthalmic Institute Laboratory, Department of Ophthalmology, 'Gregorio Marañón' University General Hospital, Madrid, Spain
Correspondence: EF Rubio, c/ Vizconde de los Asilos, 12, 2° B Madrid 28027, Spain. Tel: +34 91 5867326; Fax: +34 91 5867330; E-mail: mfernandezr.hgugm@salud.madrid.org
Received 15 October 2004; Accepted 28 February 2005; Published online 29 April 2005.
Abstract
Aim
To ascertain the effect of elderly in the conjunctival bacteria frequency of patients undergoing cataract extraction.
Methods
A retrospective case series study of 4432 consecutive patients who underwent cataract surgery, without excluding any of them for having pre-existing diseases. Their preoperative conjunctival culture were performed over a 3-year period (1994–1996). Bacteria were grouped in nine categories and patients were divided into seven groups, according to age; comparisons between groups were made by means of the
2 test, and the Mantel-Haenszel test to analyse age as a confounder, using SPSS program, version 12.
Results
Patients aged over 74 years accounted for 41.4%; women predominated among this group (61.4%), but not in the patients younger than 75 (47.7%); In the whole sample women accounted for 53.4%. Patients aged 75–96 years had a greater frequency of: Corynebacteria, Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus sp. (except Streptococcus pneumoniae), Gram-negative cocci and Gram-negative rods (except Haemophilus sp.) and 'other bacteria' categories than those aged 3–74 years. Different bacteria frequency in both sexes produced a confounding effect in the comparison between age-groups. Men had more Staphylococci coagulase (–), S. pneumoniae and Gram-negative rods than women.
Conclusions
Elderly patients awaiting cataract surgery had more conjunctival bacteria than those younger than 75 years, except Staphylococcus coagulase negative, S. pneumoniae and Haemophilus sp. At any age, men had more bacteria than women. These increments of frequencies could increase the risk of intraocular surgery contamination.
Keywords:
advanced age, cataract surgery, conjunctival bacteria, nonsurgical risk factors
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