Alteration of the Brains Microbiome and Neuroinflammation Associated with Ventricular Catheters
Zihan Zhu, Dipankar Biswas, Michael Meggyesy, Di Cao, Gwendolyn Williams, Richard Um, Farzad Maroufi, Ryan P. Lee, Jun Hua, Liangliang Zhang, Jeffrey Capadona, Horst V. Recum, Mark G. Luciano

TL;DR
This study investigates how different catheter materials influence brain microbiome composition and neuroinflammation in mice, revealing material-dependent microbial shifts that may impact shunt failure mechanisms.
Contribution
It demonstrates that intracranial catheter implantation causes material-specific changes in brain-associated microbial communities and neuroimmune responses.
Findings
Material-dependent shifts in brain microbiome composition.
Antibiotic-impregnated catheters promote immune-regulatory microbes.
Pro-inflammatory taxa are enriched with plain silicone catheters.
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Proximal catheter obstruction is the leading cause of ventriculoperitoneal shunt failure, yet the biological triggers of peri-catheter inflammation and tissue ingrowth remain poorly defined. Evidence of bacterial ribosomal RNA in human brain tissue suggests that low-biomass microbial exposure may influence the inflammatory microenvironment surrounding implants. This study examined if microbial signal is detectable in unaltered brain tissue and if catheter implantation produces microbial shifts relevant to shunt dysfunction. Methods: Twenty-nine female mice were assigned to unaltered control (UC), trauma control (TC), plain silicone catheter (PSC), or antibiotic-impregnated catheter (AIC) groups. Brain and cecum tissues were harvested at postoperative days 7 and 28 for 16S rRNA sequencing. Microbial composition and predicted functional pathways were analyzed. A…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCerebrospinal fluid and hydrocephalus · Neonatal and fetal brain pathology · Spinal Dysraphism and Malformations
