Abstract
During an 8-month period all intravascular catheters were removed by sterile technique upon completion of use and submitted to the hospital microbiology laboratory. All catheters were routinely cultured by the semiquantitative culture technique, with greater than or equal to 15 colonies being defined as a positive result. Of the 687 Teflon catheters cultured, 6.9% were positive by culture, compared with 24.6% of 77 polyvinyl chloride catheters (P less than 0.001). Also, colonization of coagulase-negative staphylococci on polyvinyl chloride was more than on Teflon. These data suggest that polyvinyl chloride catheters are colonized more frequently with organisms than are Teflon catheters; additionally, there is an increased affinity of coagulase-negative staphylococci for polyvinyl chloride as compared with Teflon, substantiating our previous observations with an in vitro system. We conclude that the type of catheter material may be important in determining the incidence of catheter-related infections and in selective colonization by coagulase-negative staphylococci.
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