reviewJournal of Medical MicrobiologyFeb 11, 2015Closed access

Healthcare-associated infections, medical devices and biofilms: risk, tolerance and control

Scapa Healthcare (United Kingdom) · University of Liverpool · +2 more institutions

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Abstract

Biofilms are of great importance in infection control and healthcare-associated infections owing to their inherent tolerance and 'resistance' to antimicrobial therapies. Biofilms have been shown to develop on medical device surfaces, and dispersal of single and clustered cells implies a significant risk of microbial dissemination within the host and increased risk of infection. Although routine microbiological testing assists with the diagnosis of a clinical infection, there is no 'gold standard' available to reveal the presence of microbial biofilm from samples collected within clinical settings. Furthermore, such limiting factors as viable but non-culturable micro-organisms and small-colony variants often…

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