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Bacterial Surface Detachment during Nebulization with Contaminated Reusable Home Nebulizers

Patients with chronic respiratory diseases use home nebulizers that are often contaminated with pathogenic microbes to deliver aerosolized medications. The conditions under which these microbes leave the surface as bioaerosols during nebulization are not well characterized. The objectives of this st...

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Autores principales: Harris, Jamie C., Collins, Melanie S., Huang, Pamela H., Schramm, Craig M., Nero, Thomas, Yan, Jing, Murray, Thomas S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8809330/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35107362
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02535-21
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author Harris, Jamie C.
Collins, Melanie S.
Huang, Pamela H.
Schramm, Craig M.
Nero, Thomas
Yan, Jing
Murray, Thomas S.
author_facet Harris, Jamie C.
Collins, Melanie S.
Huang, Pamela H.
Schramm, Craig M.
Nero, Thomas
Yan, Jing
Murray, Thomas S.
author_sort Harris, Jamie C.
collection PubMed
description Patients with chronic respiratory diseases use home nebulizers that are often contaminated with pathogenic microbes to deliver aerosolized medications. The conditions under which these microbes leave the surface as bioaerosols during nebulization are not well characterized. The objectives of this study were to (i) determine whether different pathogens detach and disperse from the nebulizer surface during aerosolization and (ii) measure the effects of relative humidity and drying times on bacterial surface detachment and aerosolization. Bacteria were cultured from bioaerosols after Pari LC Plus albuterol nebulization using two different sources, as follows: (i) previously used nebulizers donated by anonymous patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) and (ii) nebulizers inoculated with bacteria isolated from the lungs of CF patients. Fractionated bioaerosols were collected with a Next-Generation Impactor. For a subset of bacteria, surface adherence during rewetting was measured with fluorescence microscopy. Bacteria dispersed from the surface of used CF patient nebulizers during albuterol nebulization. Eighty percent (16/20) of clinical isolates inoculated on the nebulizer in the laboratory formed bioaerosols. Detachment from the plastic surface into the chamber solution predicted bioaerosol production. Increased relative humidity and decreased drying times after inoculation favored bacterial dispersion on aerosols during nebulized therapy. Pathogenic bacteria contaminating nebulizer surfaces detached from the surface as bioaerosols during nebulized therapies, especially under environmental conditions when contaminated nebulizers were dried or stored at high relative humidity. This finding emphasizes the need for appropriate nebulizer cleaning, disinfection, and complete drying during storage and informs environmental conditions that favor bacterial surface detachment during nebulization. IMPORTANCE Studies from around the world have demonstrated that many patients use contaminated nebulizers to deliver medication into their lungs. While it is known that using contaminated medications in a nebulizer can lead to a lung infection, whether bacteria on the surface of a contaminated nebulizer detach as bioaerosols capable of reaching the lung has not been studied. This work demonstrates that a subset of clinical bacteria enter solution from the surface during nebulization and are aerosolized. Environmental conditions of high relative humidity during storage favor dispersion from the surface. We also provide results of an in vitro assay conducted to monitor bacterial surface detachment during multiple cycles of rewetting that correlate with the results of nebulizer/bacterial surface interactions. These studies demonstrate for the first time that pathogenic bacteria on the nebulizer surface pose a risk of bacterial inhalation to patients who use contaminated nebulizers.
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spelling pubmed-88093302022-02-09 Bacterial Surface Detachment during Nebulization with Contaminated Reusable Home Nebulizers Harris, Jamie C. Collins, Melanie S. Huang, Pamela H. Schramm, Craig M. Nero, Thomas Yan, Jing Murray, Thomas S. Microbiol Spectr Research Article Patients with chronic respiratory diseases use home nebulizers that are often contaminated with pathogenic microbes to deliver aerosolized medications. The conditions under which these microbes leave the surface as bioaerosols during nebulization are not well characterized. The objectives of this study were to (i) determine whether different pathogens detach and disperse from the nebulizer surface during aerosolization and (ii) measure the effects of relative humidity and drying times on bacterial surface detachment and aerosolization. Bacteria were cultured from bioaerosols after Pari LC Plus albuterol nebulization using two different sources, as follows: (i) previously used nebulizers donated by anonymous patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) and (ii) nebulizers inoculated with bacteria isolated from the lungs of CF patients. Fractionated bioaerosols were collected with a Next-Generation Impactor. For a subset of bacteria, surface adherence during rewetting was measured with fluorescence microscopy. Bacteria dispersed from the surface of used CF patient nebulizers during albuterol nebulization. Eighty percent (16/20) of clinical isolates inoculated on the nebulizer in the laboratory formed bioaerosols. Detachment from the plastic surface into the chamber solution predicted bioaerosol production. Increased relative humidity and decreased drying times after inoculation favored bacterial dispersion on aerosols during nebulized therapy. Pathogenic bacteria contaminating nebulizer surfaces detached from the surface as bioaerosols during nebulized therapies, especially under environmental conditions when contaminated nebulizers were dried or stored at high relative humidity. This finding emphasizes the need for appropriate nebulizer cleaning, disinfection, and complete drying during storage and informs environmental conditions that favor bacterial surface detachment during nebulization. IMPORTANCE Studies from around the world have demonstrated that many patients use contaminated nebulizers to deliver medication into their lungs. While it is known that using contaminated medications in a nebulizer can lead to a lung infection, whether bacteria on the surface of a contaminated nebulizer detach as bioaerosols capable of reaching the lung has not been studied. This work demonstrates that a subset of clinical bacteria enter solution from the surface during nebulization and are aerosolized. Environmental conditions of high relative humidity during storage favor dispersion from the surface. We also provide results of an in vitro assay conducted to monitor bacterial surface detachment during multiple cycles of rewetting that correlate with the results of nebulizer/bacterial surface interactions. These studies demonstrate for the first time that pathogenic bacteria on the nebulizer surface pose a risk of bacterial inhalation to patients who use contaminated nebulizers. American Society for Microbiology 2022-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8809330/ /pubmed/35107362 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02535-21 Text en Copyright © 2022 Harris et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Harris, Jamie C.
Collins, Melanie S.
Huang, Pamela H.
Schramm, Craig M.
Nero, Thomas
Yan, Jing
Murray, Thomas S.
Bacterial Surface Detachment during Nebulization with Contaminated Reusable Home Nebulizers
title Bacterial Surface Detachment during Nebulization with Contaminated Reusable Home Nebulizers
title_full Bacterial Surface Detachment during Nebulization with Contaminated Reusable Home Nebulizers
title_fullStr Bacterial Surface Detachment during Nebulization with Contaminated Reusable Home Nebulizers
title_full_unstemmed Bacterial Surface Detachment during Nebulization with Contaminated Reusable Home Nebulizers
title_short Bacterial Surface Detachment during Nebulization with Contaminated Reusable Home Nebulizers
title_sort bacterial surface detachment during nebulization with contaminated reusable home nebulizers
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8809330/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35107362
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02535-21
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