Related Articles Neonatal sepsis bacterial isolates and antibiotic susceptibility patterns at a NICU in a tertiary care hospital in western Nepal: A retrospective analysis. Kathmandu Univ Med J (KUMJ). 2007 Apr - Jun;5(18):153-160 Authors: Shaw CK, Shaw P, Thapalial A Background: Neonatal sepsis is one of the commonest causes of neonatal mortality in the developing world. The neonatal intensive care units (NICUs) today face one common problem of tackling sepsis and neonatologists remain constantly baffled by the changing patterns of microbial flora and their sensitivity patterns. With the neonatal services coming of age in Nepal this retrospective analysis spread over a period of six years has become very pertinent. Materials and methods: We conducted a retrospective study over a period of six years to study the prevalence of different organisms causing septicaemia in the community and at our hospital and the antibiotic susceptibility pattern. In all 265 cases of suspected sepsis were screened using a panel consisting of CRP, ANC and I/T ratio and subsequently confirmed by cultures. The cases were early onset (n=44), late onset (n=56) and nosocomial groups (n=40). The data for the intramural (n=32) and extramural (n=68) cases was analysed separately. Results: One hundred nineteen cultures out of the 131 positives were obtained from blood (44.92%) and the remaining were isolated from urine (6.11 %) and CSF (4.58 %). The most common orga ...