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SU Ming-chuan, WANG Lin-yao, WANG Mei-juan, et al. Epidemiological Characteristics and Drug Resistance of Microbial Pathogens of Patients With Silicosis Combined With Pulmonary Infection[J]. Journal of Sichuan University (Medical Sciences), 2023, 54(2): 411-414. DOI: 10.12182/20230360211
Citation: SU Ming-chuan, WANG Lin-yao, WANG Mei-juan, et al. Epidemiological Characteristics and Drug Resistance of Microbial Pathogens of Patients With Silicosis Combined With Pulmonary Infection[J]. Journal of Sichuan University (Medical Sciences), 2023, 54(2): 411-414. DOI: 10.12182/20230360211

Epidemiological Characteristics and Drug Resistance of Microbial Pathogens of Patients With Silicosis Combined With Pulmonary Infection

  •   Objective  To investigate the epidemiological characteristics of patients with silicosis combined with pulmonary infection in recent years, to study the distribution and the drug susceptibility of fungal and bacterial pathogens in their sputum samples, and to provide references for the prevention and treatment of silicosis and the appropriate drug use.
      Methods  The clinical data and drug sensitivity test results of patients with silicosis combined with pulmonary infection diagnosed at the Department of Occupational Diseases, West China Fourth Hospital, Sichuan University were retrospectively analyzed.
      Results  A total of 318 patients with silicosis combined with pulmonary infection who received treatment between January 2017 and December 2020 were enrolled. All the patients had positive microorganism test results. All participants were male. Their median age at the time of onset was 51.00 years and the median time of exposure to silica dust at work was 12.40 years. They worked mostly in construction, non-ferrous metal mining, and coal mining. The main types of work they did were pneumatic drilling, coal digging, and mining. The positive detection rates for the first, second and third phases of silicosis were 27.54%, 28.32%, and 32.97%, respectively. A total of 341 strains of fungal and bacterial pathogens were isolated, of which, 54.1% were fungi, including 114 strains (35.8%) of Candida albicans, and 53.1% were bacteria, including 168 strains (52.8%) of gram-negative bacteria, most of which being Klebsiella pneumoniae (30.2%). There was only 1 strain (0.3%) of gram-positive bacteria, namely Staphylococcus hemolyticus. Gram-negative bacilli were most resistant to ampicillin and highly sensitive to penicillin G and ofloxacin.
      Conclusion  Among patients with silicosis combined with pulmonary infection, the incidence of pulmonary infection increases along with the progress of silicosis. Microorganism analysis reveals high detection rates for fungi and the bacteria detected are predominantly gram-negative bacteria. The overall prospect for drug resistance rate was not optimistic.
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