Eklablog
Editer l'article Suivre ce blog Administration + Créer mon blog

Publicité

Couches de bactéries dans les cathéters urinaires

Continuing Medical EducationNature Clinical Practice Urology (2008) 5, 598-608
doi:10.1038/ncpuro1231  
Received 30 March 2008 | Accepted 18 September 2008 | Published online: 14 October 2008

Bacterial biofilms in patients with indwelling urinary catheters

David J Stickler

Summary

Bacteria have a basic survival strategy: to colonize surfaces and grow as biofilm communities embedded in a gel-like polysaccharide matrix. The catheterized urinary tract provides ideal conditions for the development of enormous biofilm populations. Many bacterial species colonize indwelling catheters as biofilms, inducing complications in patients' care. The most troublesome complications are the crystalline biofilms that can occlude the catheter lumen and trigger episodes of pyelonephritis and septicemia. The crystalline biofilms result from infection by urease-producing bacteria, particularly Proteus mirabilis. Urease raises the urinary pH and drives the formation of calcium phosphate and magnesium phosphate crystals in the biofilm. All types of catheter are vulnerable to encrustation by these biofilms, and clinical prevention strategies are clearly needed, as bacteria growing in the biofilm mode are resistant to antibiotics. Evidence indicates that treatment of symptomatic, catheter-associated urinary tract infection is more effective if biofilm-laden catheters are changed before antibiotic treatment is initiated. Infection with P. mirabilis exposes the many faults of currently available catheters, and plenty of scope exists for improvement in both their design and production; manufacturers should take up the challenge to improve patient outcomes.

http://www.nature.com/ncpuro/journal/v5/n11/full/ncpuro1231.html

 

Publicité
Retour à l'accueil
Partager cet article
Repost0
Pour être informé des derniers articles, inscrivez vous :
Commenter cet article