AI Article Synopsis

  • CAUTI (Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection) poses significant risks for patients using catheters, leading to the development of a new double-balloon Foley catheter designed for effective irrigation of catheter surfaces.
  • The catheter features a retention cuff to hold it in place and a specialized irrigation cuff that delivers antimicrobial solutions to prevent infection by cleansing the area between the urethra and bladder.
  • Testing showed that this new catheter, when used with a specific antimicrobial solution (PG + CAP), significantly reduces biofilm formation by common uropathogens, suggesting potential effectiveness in preventing CAUTI, warranting further research.

Article Abstract

CAUTI remains a serious healthcare issue for incontinent patients whose urine drainage is managed by catheters. A novel double-balloon Foley catheter was developed which was capable of irrigating the extraluminal catheter surfaces within the periurethral space between the urethral-bladder junction and meatus. The catheter has a retention cuff that is inflated to secure the catheter in the bladder and a novel irrigation cuff proximal to the urethral-bladder junction capable of providing periurethral irrigation from the urethral-bladder junction to the meatus. Uniform periurethral irrigation was demonstrated in an ex vivo porcine model by adding a dye to the antimicrobial urethral irrigation solution. An in vitro biofilm colonization model was adapted to study the ability of periurethral irrigation with a newly developed antimicrobial combination consisting of polygalacturonic acid + caprylic acid (PG + CAP) to prevent axial colonization of the extraluminal urethral indwelling catheter shaft by common uropathogens. The extraluminal surface of control catheters that were not irrigated formed biofilms along the entire axial urethral tract after 24 hours. Significant ( < 0.001) inhibition of colonization was seen against multidrug-resistant (PA), carbapenem-resistant (EC), and carbapenem-resistant (KB). For other common uropathogens including (CA), (PR), and (EF), a first irrigation treatment completely inhibited colonization of half of the indwelling catheter closest to the bladder and a second treatment largely disinfected the remaining intraurethral portion of the catheter towards the meatus. The novel Foley catheter and PG + CAP antimicrobial irrigant prevented biofilm colonization in an in vitro CAUTI model and merits further testing in an in vivo CAUTI prevention model.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6959145PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2019/2869039DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • CAUTI (Catheter-Associated Urinary Tract Infection) poses significant risks for patients using catheters, leading to the development of a new double-balloon Foley catheter designed for effective irrigation of catheter surfaces.
  • The catheter features a retention cuff to hold it in place and a specialized irrigation cuff that delivers antimicrobial solutions to prevent infection by cleansing the area between the urethra and bladder.
  • Testing showed that this new catheter, when used with a specific antimicrobial solution (PG + CAP), significantly reduces biofilm formation by common uropathogens, suggesting potential effectiveness in preventing CAUTI, warranting further research.
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