1988
DOI: 10.1099/00222615-26-1-61
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Bacteriuria and bacteraemia in patients with long-term indwelling catheters-a domiciliary study

Abstract: Summary. Men with indwelling catheters and men and women with suprapubic catheters were studied in their homes. Urine and blood were cultured and body temperature recorded after every catheter change. Nearly all patients had infected urine after 4 weeks of catheterisation, and all had bacteriuria after longer periods, usually with a mixture of organisms. Culture on selective media revealed a wider range of organisms than was detected on routine C.L.E.D. and blood agar with antibiotic sensitivity disks, but rou… Show more

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Cited by 55 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…In a study describing 115 men and women with long-term catheterization (most patients did not have a neurogenic bladder) who were bacteriuric and living at home, Jewes et al [73] reported bacteremia after 20 (10%) of 197 urethral catheter changes and 1 (5%) of 19 suprapubic catheter changes. All bacteremic episodes were asymptomatic, and patients were afebrile.…”
Section: Evidence Summarymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In a study describing 115 men and women with long-term catheterization (most patients did not have a neurogenic bladder) who were bacteriuric and living at home, Jewes et al [73] reported bacteremia after 20 (10%) of 197 urethral catheter changes and 1 (5%) of 19 suprapubic catheter changes. All bacteremic episodes were asymptomatic, and patients were afebrile.…”
Section: Evidence Summarymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although bacteremias in LTCFs are uncommon [69,72], urinary catheterization was associated with a 39-fold increase in the incidence of bacteremia in one study [71]. Transient asymptomatic bacteremia occurs in ∼4% of bacteriuric patients with long-term catheterization whose indwelling urethral or suprapubic catheter is removed or replaced [73][74][75].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Transient asymptomatic bacteraemia is common during initial catheter insertion or during catheter exchange in chronically catheterised patients [38] (III). The risk of bacteraemia during initial catheter insertion is similar, whether there is a pre-existing UTI (7%) or sterile urine (8.2%) [39,40] (IIa).…”
Section: Long-term Catheterisationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indwelling urinary catheters have the highest risk of nosocomial infection due to the fact that they remain in the bladder for a long period of time and allow microbial colonization and invasion [1]. In general, catheter-associated urinary tract infection (CAUTI) is the most common nosocomial infection in the United States, accounting for nearly a third of all hospital infections [2, 3].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%