1. Bacterial Contamination of Hemodialysis Devices in Hospital Dialysis Wards.
- Author
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Shimohata T, Mawatari K, Uebanso T, Honjo A, Tsunedomi A, Hatayama S, Sato Y, Kido J, Nishisaka R, Yoshimoto A, Yamashita T, Amano S, Maetani-Yasui M, Iba H, Harada Y, Nakahashi M, Yasui-Yamada S, Hamada Y, Nakagawa T, Sogabe M, Emoto T, Akutagawa M, Okahisa T, Kinouchi Y, and Takahashi A
- Subjects
- Bacteremia etiology, Humans, Renal Dialysis instrumentation, Bacterial Load, Equipment Contamination, Renal Dialysis adverse effects
- Abstract
Chronic care patients undergoing hemodialysis for treatment of end-stage renal failure experience higher rates of bloodstream-associated infection due to the patients' compromised immune system and management of the bloodstream through catheters. Staphylococcus species are acommon cause of hemodialysis catheterrelated bloodstream infections. We investigated environmental bacterial contamination of dialysis wards and contamination of hemodialysis devices to determine the source of bacteria for these infections. All bacterial samples were collected by the swab method and the agarose stamp method. And which bacterium were identified by BBL CRYSTAL Kit or 16s rRNA sequences. In our data, bacterial cell number of hemodialysis device was lower than environment of patient surrounds. But Staphylococcus spp. were found predominantly on the hemodialysis device (46.8%), especially on areas frequently touched by healthcare-workers (such as Touch screen). Among Staphylococcus spp., Staphylococcus epidermidis was most frequently observed (42.1% of Staphylococcus spp.), and more surprising, 48.2% of the Staphylococcus spp. indicated high resistance for methicillin. Our finding suggests that hemodialysis device highly contaminated with bloodstream infection associated bacteria. This study can be used as a source to assess the risk of contamination-related infection and to develop the cleaning system for the better prevention for bloodstream infections in patients with hemodialysis. J. Med. Invest. 66 : 148-152, February, 2019.
- Published
- 2019
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