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      Urinary catheter policies for long-term bladder drainage

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          Abstract

          People requiring long-term bladder draining commonly experience catheter-associated urinary tract infection and other problems.

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          Most cited references32

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          A prospective microbiologic study of bacteriuria in patients with chronic indwelling urethral catheters.

          Bacteriuria is common in chronically catheterized patients and is associated with both acute and chronic complications. Of 605 consecutive weekly urine specimens from 20 chronically catheterized patients, 98% contained bacteria at high concentrations and 77% were polymicrobial. The mean interval between new episodes of bacteriuria was 1.8 weeks. Most species of bacteria caused five to seven new episodes of bacteriuria per 100 weeks of catheterization. Even though access to the catheter lumen was similar, the duration of bacteriuric episodes varied greatly by species. Of the episodes of bacteriuria caused by nonenterococcal gram-positive cocci, greater than 75% lasted less than one week. Mean durations of episodes of bacteriuria due to Escherichia coli, Proteus mirabilis, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa were four to six weeks, whereas those due to Providencia stuartii averaged 10 weeks and ranged up to 36 weeks. Thus, the very high prevalence of bacteriuria--virtually 100%--was a result of a high incidence caused by many different species combined with the prolonged residence of some gram-negative bacilli in the catheter and urinary tract.
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            Catheter-associated urinary tract infections.

            Nosocomial urinary tract infection (UTI) is the most common infection acquired in both hospitals and nursing homes and is usually associated with catheterization. This infection would be even more common but for the use of the closed catheter system. Most modifications have not improved on the closed catheter itself. Even with meticulous care, this system will not prevent bacteriuria. After bacteriuria develops, the ability to limit its complications is minimal. Once a catheter is put in place, the clinician must keep two concepts in mind: keep the catheter system closed in order to postpone the onset of bacteriuria, and remove the catheter as soon as possible. If the catheter can be removed before bacteriuria develops, postponement becomes prevention.
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              Catheter-associated urinary tract infections.

              Millions of urethral catheters are used each year. This device subverts several host defenses to allow bacterial entry at the rate of 3% to 10% incidence per day, and its presence encourages the organism's persistent residence in the urinary tract. Most catheter-associated bacteriurias are asymptomatic. The complications in short-term catheterized patients include fever, acute pyelonephritis, bacteremia, and death; patients with long-term catheters in place are at risk for these complications and catheter obstruction, urinary tract stones, local periurinary infections, chronic renal inflammation, chronic pyelonephritis, and, over years, bladder cancer. The closed catheter system has been a magnificant step forward in the prevention of catheter-associated bacteriuria. Indeed, only two catheter principles are universally recommended: keep the closed catheter system closed and remove the catheter as soon as possible. Most modifications of the closed catheter system have not improved markedly on its ability to postpone bacteriuria. On first inspection, systemic antibiotics seem to be an exception to this rule, but their use results in infection of the bladder with resistant organisms, including candida. This and the effect of side effects on the patient and emergence of resistant bacteria in the medical unit have led most authorities to conclude that antibiotics are not useful for prevention of bacteriuria, nor for treatment of bacteriuria in the asymptomatic catheterized patient. For symptomatic patients, usually with fever or signs of sepsis, treatment of bacteriuria with appropriate systemic antibiotics and removal or replacement of the urethral catheter are indicated. Gloves, hand washing, and segregation of catheterized patients can minimize nosocomial clusters. Because clinicians can only postpone bacteriuria, and once it occurs, clinicians seem unable to prevent its complications, methodologies other than urethral catheters should be used for urine drainage assistance whenever possible. These options include condom, intermittent, suprapubic, and intraurethral catheterization for appropriate patients. The few data available suggest that each one of these catheterization options yields a lower incidence of bacteriuria-and its consequent complications-than urethral catheterization.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
                Wiley-Blackwell
                14651858
                August 15 2012
                :
                :
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Cochrane Incontinence Group
                Article
                10.1002/14651858.CD004201.pub3
                22895939
                ccf767c0-eac9-46d3-b6bd-cd1c959bbe26
                © 2012
                History

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