<blockquote>Quote<br><hr><i>Originally posted by: <b>Anonymous</b></i><br>this is a bit off track, but Diane, how do you get b. cepacia? i have read some about it and it sounds like something that can only be contracted from others with it? please enlighten me, cause i've never heard of someone developing it as late in life as you did. you seem to be doing very well with it, which is AWESOME! thanks for any info. you can give!<hr></blockquote>
b.cepacia can be acquired a number of ways for cf patients . Unfortunately i got mine in the hospital when i went in electively for sinus surgery. I hadn't been in hospital for years, and had very minimal lung involvement. My fev1 was 91% and fvc was 100%. I had no idea about anything like cepacia. Never heard of it till i got admitted for surgery and they asked me if i had it. I asked what it was because i had never heard of it. After my surgery, i started getting a lung infection, which i thought might be reasonable since i had just had surgery and felt like crap. The only wierd thing was i never seemed to get better. No matter what antibiotic my doctor put me on, worked for about a week then the whole problem would resurface again. The constant coughing, the unbearable tiredness ( just taking a shower was exhausting) the fevers that started same time every day. Then finally i had a sputum culture done and b.cepacia showed up. I was so devastated , and so angry that noone even told me about cepacia or how it can be transmitted or how i could have avoided it. I went in electively to have a surgery to help keep my lungs as well as they were, and i came home with something that could destroy them<img src="i/expressions/brokenheart.gif" border="0">
After knowing what i do about b.cepacia now, i come to realize the hospital is the easiest place to acquire it.
It can be everywhere and on anything you touch. It can live in moist places for a year or more ( showers that dont get properly disinfected in the hospital, Bedrails that arent properly disinfected,The phone, there are so many hiding spots for b.cepacia amoungst other things) Had i known what i know now i would have taken disinfecting wipes with me when i went in, and wiped everything i touched or went near with them. My fev1 now is 45% and my fcv 67%. That is partly my own fault for not doing treatments as soon as i was diagnosed. When i had some major bleeding that required 2 pulmonary embolizations i woke right up and started to do what i can to stay as well as i can.
~Diane 39 / cf / diabetes / b.cepacia