Entry of Bacteria into the Urinary Tracts of Patients with Inlying Catheters
- 21 March 1957
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 256 (12) , 556-557
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm195703212561206
Abstract
THERE is strong evidence that catheterization is an important means whereby bacteria are introduced into the urinary tract.1 2 3 4 Although bacteria are frequently introduced into the bladder at the time that catheters are inserted, urinary-tract infections are much less common after single catheterizations than after constant drainage of the bladder with inlying catheters.3 , 5 Furthermore, the prophylactic and therapeutic value of antibacterial agents is materially diminished in patients harboring inlying catheters, and the failures of antibacterial agents in such patients are usually due to the replacement of initially susceptible bacteria by resistant ones.Since the bacteria that are found in the urinary . . .Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Observations on the Reliability and Safety of Bladder Catheterization for Bacteriologic Study of the UrineNew England Journal of Medicine, 1956
- URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS CAUSED BY ANTIBIOTIC-RESISTANT COLIFORM BACILLIJAMA, 1956
- Chemotherapeutic and antibiotic drugs in the management of infections of the urinary tractThe American Journal of Medicine, 1955