Literature DB >> 15457030

Fungal growth inside saline-filled implants and the role of injection ports in fungal translocation: in vitro study.

Aydin Saray1, Dilek Kilic, Sedat Kaygusuz, Hakan Boyunaga, Ozlem Ozlük.   

Abstract

Infection is a serious complication of breast augmentation and tissue expansion with inflatable devices. Several reports have shown that fungi may be able to survive, colonize, and even cause infection in saline-filled devices. The mechanism of how they penetrate, spread, and colonize inside the inflatable implants is not exactly understood. The authors assessed both the expander membrane and the port in terms of leakage and penetration of Candida albicans and Aspergillus niger in an in vitro model. Thirty saline-filled expanders connected to the injection port were placed in sterile containers filled with tryptic soy broth culture medium to simulate the clinical situation in phases I and II. Intact and multipunctured ports were used in the first and second phases of the study, respectively. Either the container or the implant was inoculated with one of these fungi, and six implants in containers without fungal inoculation served as controls. As a third phase, intraluminal survival of fungi was investigated in saline-filled containers (n = 12) in 21 days. The silicone membrane, with its intact connecting tube and port, was impermeable to these fungi, whereas both fungi were able to diffuse inside-out or outside-in through the punctured ports. C. albicans did not survive beyond 18 days in saline, whereas A. niger continued to multiply at day 21. Chemical analyses of the implant fluids revealed that the contents of the culture medium diffused into the implants in phases I and II. The data show that an intact silicone membrane is impermeable to fungi, and punctured ports allow translocation of fungi into the implants. Fungi can grow and reproduce in a saline-only environment, and their survival periods differ among the species. Furthermore, their survival may be enhanced by the influx of substances through the implant shell.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15457030     DOI: 10.1097/01.prs.0000135855.29657.91

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plast Reconstr Surg        ISSN: 0032-1052            Impact factor:   4.730


  2 in total

1.  Rare Presentation of Breast Implant Infection and Breast Implant Illness Caused by Penicillium Species.

Authors:  Natalie Kuhn; Christopher Homsy
Journal:  Eplasty       Date:  2022-06-03

2.  Contamination of single fluid-filled intragastric balloons with orogastric fluid is not associated with hyperinflation: an ex-vivo study and systematic review of literature.

Authors:  Fadi Hawa; Eric J Vargas; Andres Acosta; Alison McRae; Fateh Bazerbachi; Barham K Abu Dayyeh
Journal:  BMC Gastroenterol       Date:  2021-07-12       Impact factor: 3.067

  2 in total

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