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[Etiological and drug sensitivity analysis of lacrimal canaliculitis].

Objective: To analyze the etiology and drug sensitivity of lacrimal canaliculitis. Methods: Retrospective study of case series. The general information, culture results and drug sensitivity results of 52 patients (including 10 males and 42 females with an average age of 60.3 years) clinically diagnosed with lacrimal canaliculitis during 2011 and 2016 at Beijing Tongren Hospital of Capital Medical University have been analyzed. The enumeration data have been tested with Chi-square method. Results: The positive rate of bacterial culture was 78.8%, and the fungal culture tests of all cases showed negative results. Sixty strains of bacteria were isolated from 41 patients whose bacterial culture tests showed positive results, Gram-positive bacteria have been confirmed as the main among the isolated bacteria with Streptococcus (18.3%), Propionibacterium (18.3%), and Streptococcus (15.0%) identified as the three common genera. Thirteen cases (25.0%, all the 13 patients were female) involved with mixed infection, 13.3% (8/60) of the isolated strains were multi-drug resistant bacteria. The drug sensitive rate of the bacteria to fluoroquinolones antibiotics(79.3%, 230/290) was higher than that to cephalosporins(62.1%, 36/58) and aminoglycoside antibiotics(56.3%, 98/174), and such differences are of statistical significance (χ(2)=7.977, 27.738, P< 0.05). Except for the fact that gram-positive bacteria are mostly sensitive to vancomycin, the sensitive rate of the bacteria to gatifloxacin was the highest and that to tobramycin was the lowest. Conclusion: Lacrimal canaliculitis tend to affect women and elderly patients. Staphylococcus, Propionibacterium, and Streptococcus are the three most common genera. Gatifloxacin may be the preferred antibiotic. Antibiotics combination therapy should be applied for multi-drug resistant bacteria. (Chin J Ophthalmol, 2018, 54: 111-114) .

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