Browsing by Author "Wijesuriya, T."
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Item A fever study at the Colombo North Teaching Hospital (CNTH)(Sri Lanka Medical Association, 2007) Bailey, M.S.; Wijesuriya, T.; Premaratna, R.; de Silva, N.R.; Wuthiekanun, F.; Peacock, S.J.; Lalloo, D.G.; de Silva, H.J.OBJECTIVES: To determine the aetiology of febrile illnesses at CNTH, to identify effective laboratory tests for their confirmation, and to develop clinical prediction rules that will assist diagnosis. DESIGN, SETTING AND METHODS: A prospective cohort of in-patients is being studied during a one-year period. Patients with oral temperatures >38°C are eligible for inclusion unless they are aged <16 years, have been admitted for >24 hours or have received antibiotics in hospital. Written consent is obtained and a structured questionnaire is completed. Blood is taken for cultures, biochemistry assays, serology and PCR tests. Urine is taken for assays to detect antimicrobial activity. RESULTS: During the first 4 months, there were 180 eligible patients of whom 138 (77%) were recruited. The mean age was 36 years, the male:female ratio was 2.1 and 90% were from Gampaha district. There were no significant differences regarding age or sex in comparison to patients not recruited. Infections were unlocalised in 67% (50% unconfirmed, 43% dengue fever, 3% leptospirosis, 3% scrub typhus, 1% malaria). Localised infections were respiratory (9%), urinary tract (8%), neurological (4%), gastrointestinal (3%) and skin (2%). Non-infectious causes accounted for 3% of febrile patients. Bacteraemia was found in only 4% despite every patient having 2 high-quality blood cultures. Leucopenia or neutropcnia were useful early markers of dengue fever. CONCLUSIONS: Non-bacterial agents cause most febrile illnesses in Gampaha district. New laboratory tests and clinical prediction rules are required for their diagnosis.Item Microbiology of gallbladder bile in uncomplicated symptomatic cholelithiasis(Elsevier, 2008) Abeysuriya, V.; Deen, K.I.; Wijesuriya, T.; Salgado, S. S.BACKGROUND: Few studies have assessed microflora and their antibiotic sensitivity in normal bile and lithogenic bile with different types of gallstones. METHODS: We performed a case control study of 70 bile samples (35 cholesterol and 35 pigment stones from 51 females and 19 males, aged 21-72 years with a median age of 37 years) from patients who underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy for uncomplicated cholelithiasis, and 20 controls (14 females and 6 males, aged 33-70 years with a median age of 38 years) who underwent laparotomy and had no gallbladder stone shown by ultrasound scan. The bile samples were aerobically cultured to assess microflora and their antibiotic susceptibility. The procedures were undertaken under sterile conditions. RESULTS: Thirty-eight (54%) of the 70 patients with gallstones had bacterial isolates. Nine isolates (26%) were from cholesterol stone-containing bile and 29 isolates (82%) from pigment stone-containing bile (P=0.01, t test). Twenty-eight of these 38 (74%) bile samples were shown positive only after enrichment in brain heart infusion medium (BHI) (P=0.02, t test). The overall bacterial isolates from bile samples revealed E. coli predominantly, followed by P. aeruginosa, Enterococcus spp., Klebsiella spp. and S. epidermidis. There were no bacterial isolates in the bile of controls after either direct inoculation or enrichment in BHI. CONCLUSIONS: Bacterial isolates were found in pigment stone-containing bile. Non-lithogenic bile revealed no bacteria, showing an association between gallstone formation and the presence of bacteria in bile. Antibiotic sensitivity patterns of isolated organisms were similar irrespective of the type of stone.