“…By the 1980s, the range of infections believed to be caused by CNS, and especially by S. epidermidis, was quite wide and included bacteremia (24,207); native valve endocarditis (NVE) and prosthetic valve endocarditis (7,11,260); osteomyelitis (204,233); pyoarthritis (204); peritonitis during continuous ambulatory dialysis (182,267); mediastinitis (34); prostatitis (45,310); infections of permanent pacemakers (48), vascular grafts and intravascular catheters (242,243), cerebrospinal fluid shunts (100), and prosthetic joints and a variety of orthopedic devices (38,54,218); and UTIs (148,156,192). The CNS species S. saprophyticus was often regarded as a more important opportunistic pathogen than S. epidermidis in human UTIs, especially in young, sexually active females (3,206,307).…”