Bacterial Contamination of Angiographic Materials in Diagnostic and Interventional Neuroangiography
Christiane Franz, Claudia Fleu, Sophia Honecker, Manuela Schmiech, Dimah Hasan, Hani Ridwan, Omid Nikoubashman, Sebastian Lemmen, Martin Wiesmann

TL;DR
This study found that materials used in neuroangiography procedures are frequently contaminated with bacteria, especially when procedures last longer.
Contribution
The study provides new empirical evidence on the frequency and types of bacterial contamination during neuroangiography procedures.
Findings
Over half of the samples collected were contaminated with bacteria.
The highest contamination rate was observed in fluid from the working bowl (92.9%).
Bacterial contamination increased with longer procedure durations.
Abstract
Bacterial contamination has been reported to occur during angiographies, although data on its frequency and relevance are limited. The purpose of our study was to determine whether angiographic materials such as catheters and guide wires remain sterile during angiographies. We sought to differentiate between different materials, and to detect the frequency, the extent and the spectrum of bacterial contamination. We prospectively collected 698 fluid or material samples from 100 neuroangiographies. Per angiography we analyzed proximal ends and distal tips of catheters and guide wires, and fluid samples from the water container (working bowl) in which materials were stored during the angiography. We analyzed the frequency and extent of contamination and determined the bacterial spectrum. The majority of samples (51.4%) were contaminated. There was no angiography that showed no…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfective Endocarditis Diagnosis and Management · Central Venous Catheters and Hemodialysis · Vascular Procedures and Complications
