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Fig. 2 | Critical Care

Fig. 2

From: A complete and multifaceted overview of antibiotic use and infection diagnosis in the intensive care unit: results from a prospective four-year registration

Fig. 2

Bacterial and fungal infection focus. a Focus of bacterial infections (n = 5686); infection probability was classified as low, moderate or high in 14%, 27% and 59% of the bacterial infections, respectively; CLABSI, central-line-associated bloodstream infection. CLABSI incidence was 3.8/1000 catheter days. Crude ICU mortality rate in patients with CLABSI was 11.4%. b Focus of fungal infections (n = 520); infection probability was classified as low, moderate or high in 12%, 17% and 71% of the fungal infections, respectively; °presence of yeast in a normally sterile body site combined with clinical signs of infection; *fungal infection considered clinically likely by treating physician in the absence of yeast in a normally sterile body site; ^mucocutaneous candidiasis, candidiasis of the genitourinary tract, extra-pulmonary Aspergillus infection, invasive non-Aspergillus mold infection. c Bacterial respiratory infection (n = 2779); °bacterial pneumonia following macroaspiration; *tracheobronchitis criteria include fever, purulent tracheobronchial secretions, isolation of a respiratory pathogen of a good quality lower respiratory tract sample, no radiographic signs of new pneumonia. d Bacterial abdominal infection (n = 1094)

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