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. 1992 Apr;60(4):1363–1367. doi: 10.1128/iai.60.4.1363-1367.1992

Role of the Staphylococcus epidermidis slime layer in experimental tunnel tract infections.

C C Patrick 1, M R Plaunt 1, S V Hetherington 1, S M May 1
PMCID: PMC257005  PMID: 1548062

Abstract

An experimental animal model was used to assess the slime layer of Staphylococcus epidermidis as a pathogenic factor in tunnel tract infections. Mice were inoculated with high-slime-producing or non-slime-producing strains of S. epidermidis, either along the length of a subcutaneous catheter or in the area where a catheter had been placed and immediately removed (controls). Among the catheter-bearing mice, the phenotypically distinct staphylococci produced similar, high frequencies of abscess formation (72% [44 of 61] versus 81% [31 of 38]; P = 0.29). In controls, the non-slime-producing organisms were significantly more pathogenic (87% [40 of 46] versus 57% [25 of 44] abscess formation; P = 0.001). No consistent difference was detected between blood isolates obtained from patients with central venous catheter bacteremia and those from neonates with bacteremia in the absence of a prosthetic medical device. Quantitative culture of removed catheters showed greater adherence by the slime-producing isolates (P = 0.014). In this mouse model, slime production by S. epidermidis did not increase the risk of catheter tunnel tract infection, despite the greater catheter adherence of the slime-producing organisms. These findings suggest that traumatized tissue may be a sufficient condition for the development of S. epidermidis catheter-associated infections.

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Selected References

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