Pathogen displacement during intermittent catheter insertion: a novel in vitro urethra model.
Date
2019-11-29Author
Cortese, Yvonne J.
Wagner, Victoria E.
Tierney, Morgan
Scully, David
Devine, Declan M.
Fogarty, Andrew M.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Aim: To develop a novel in vitro urethra model and use it to determine if insertion of an intermittent urinary catheter (IC) displaces pathogenic bacteria from the urethral meatus along the urethra. Methods: Displacement of microbial growth after catheter insertion was assessed using a novel in vitro urethra model. The in vitro urethra model utilised chromogenic agar and was inoculated with bacteria at one side of the artificial urethra channel, to act as a contaminated urethral meatus, before an IC was inserted into the channel. Three ICs types were used to validate the in vitro urethra model and methodology. Results: When compared to the bacterial growth control, a significant difference in bacterial growth was found after insertion of the uncoated (P ≤ 0·001) and hydrophilic coated (P ≤ 0·009) catheters; no significant difference when a prototype catheter was inserted into the in vitro urethra model with either bacterial species tested (P ≥ 0·423). Conclusion: The results presented support the hypothesis that a single catheter insertion can initiate a catheter-associated urinary tract infection. Significance and impact: The in vitro urethra model and associated methodology were found to be reliable and reproducible (P ≥ 0·265) providing new research tool for the development and validation of emerging technologies in urological healthcare.
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