Domiciliary metaproterenol nebulization: a bacteriologic survey.

J Allergy Clin Immunol

Pulmonary and Allergy Clinics, Veterans Administration Outpatient Clinic, Davis, Calif.

Published: August 1988

We wanted to determine whether domiciliary jet nebulization (DJN) leads to contamination of the equipment with fungi or aerobic bacteria and, eventually, to respiratory colonization or pneumonia in daily users of the equipment. We surveyed from this standpoint 23 veterans 65 +/- 10.1 years of age, present or former smokers, treated with steroids more than 7 months in the year preceding the survey, and with FEV1/FVC of 42 +/- 11%; they all were daily users of the equipment, diluting the metaproterenol solution with nonbacteriostatic saline dispensed in multiple-dose bottles of 500 to 1000 ml (protocol 1 [P1]). After this protocol was completed, the large saline bottles were replaced by 20 cc vials; 11/23 completed 1 year of this treatment (protocol 2 [P2]). Equipment contamination was checked in all initial 23 patients after one-time nebulization in the laboratory with fresh material (protocol 3 [P3]). We found that DJN leads to equipment contamination in 20/23 subjects of P1 and 3/11 subjects of p2; saline bottles and the nebulizer were the most frequently contaminated items (32/41 equipment items in P1 and 10/55 in P2). The contamination was predominantly bacterial with oropharyngeal saprophytes (19 in p1, O in P2) or gram-negative bacilli (47 in P1, 8 in P2). Bacterial growth was heavier in P1 than in P2. During P3, three equipment items became contaminated in 3/23 subjects; the flora was oropharyngeal. No patient developed respiratory colonization or developed pneumonia during 9000 patient days of DJN.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0091-6749(88)91004-4DOI Listing

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