Bacterial proliferation in platelet concentrates
- 8 July 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Transfusion
- Vol. 26 (4) , 388-390
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1537-2995.1986.26486262751.x
Abstract
Growth curves of bacteria in platelet concentrates were studied to determine whether increasing the shelf-life of platelets from 3 to 7 days might have contributed to the increased number of deaths caused by contaminated platelets that have been reported to the FDA since 1980. Platelets inoculated with 103 organisms or more showed logarithmic bacterial growth throughout the 7 days of storage or until the platelets became visibly abnormal. With an inoculum of 102 organisms or less, proliferation patterns were variable: 20 percent (%) showed uninhibited logarithmic growth and 50 percent (%) remained sterile throughout the 7 days. In another 30 percent (%), bacterial growth was temporarily suppressed for 5 to 6 days before bacteria actively proliferated. These data support the hypothesis that bacterial contamination of platelets not clinically significant at 3 days of storage might become so during the current 7 day shelf life.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Extension of platelet concentrate storageTransfusion, 1983
- Improved storage of platelets for transfusion in a new containerBlood, 1982
- IMPROVED STORAGE OF PLATELETS FOR TRANSFUSION IN A NEW CONTAINER1982
- The Fate of Bacteria Introduced into Whole Blood from Which Platelet Concentrates Were Prepared and Stored at 22 or 4 CTransfusion, 1975
- Bacteriocidal Properties of Platelet ConcentratesTransfusion, 1974