• Technol Health Care · Jan 1999

    Reduction of the bacterial load by the silver-coated endotracheal tube (SCET), a laboratory investigation.

    • M Hartmann, J Guttmann, B Müller, T Hallmann, and K Geiger.
    • Clinic of Anaesthesiology, Freiburg University Hospital, Germany. hartmann@ana1.ukl.uni-freiburg.de
    • Technol Health Care. 1999 Jan 1;7(5):359-70.

    AbstractMicroaspiration enabled by high-volume-low-pressure cuffed endotracheal tubes is the most likely explanation for ventilator-associated pneumonia. To decontaminate the secretion at the proximal end of the cuff we developed a silver-coated endotracheal tube (SCET). In an in vitro model we investigated the efficacy of SCET to lower the bacterial load of secretion and aspirate. We developed a continuously contaminated and mechanically ventilated oropharynx-larynx-lung model to investigate the reduction of the bacterial count by SCET compared to controls. The model was continuously contaminated via the oropharynx-larynx with Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 27853. During the investigation period of 50 hours the bacterial count of oropharynx-larynx and lung was measured as colony-forming-units/ml. In addition, the characteristic curve of silver ion release of SCET was determined. SCET significantly reduced the bacterial count in oropharynx-larynx at all timepoints (p < 0.05). In lung the bacterial count was significantly lower beginning with the 36th hour of recording (p < 0.05). A reduction of greater than 2 log was found from 28 hours on in oropharynx-larynx and from 50 hours on in lung. The release of silver ions was very rapid and was described by a mono-exponential function with a time-constant tau of about 60 minutes and a saturation concentration of 200 +/- 80 microg/l. SCET showed a significant inhibition of growth of P. aeruginosa in the continuously contaminated and mechanically ventilated oropharynx-larynx-lung model. SCET by thus might be helpful in reducing ventilator-associated pneumonia.

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