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Review article

CHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF PRESSURE ULCER INFECTION

NASTJA KUČIŠEC-TEPEŠ orcid id orcid.org/0000-0001-5704-8281 ; Croatian Academy of Medical Sciences, Zagreb, Croatia


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Abstract

Pressure ulcer is a localized injury of the skin and/or adjacent tissue, usually above bone protrusions. It is a result of pressure or pressure combined with shear stress, friction and humidity. With regard to long life and delayed healing, it is a chronic wound. Pressure ulcer appears as a consequence of a combination of micro-embolism, ischemia and myonecrosis. These pathophysiological processes provide an ideal medium for proliferation of microorganisms, predominantly bacteria, and development of infection. Progression in the development of pressure ulcer is a dynamic process manifesting in phases, each of which is characterized by its own physiological-anatomical peculiarities and microbiological status. An open lesion without protective barrier becomes contaminated immediately, and, shortly afterwards, colonized by physiological microfl ora of the host and microbes from the environment. In the absence of preventive measures, the wound becomes critically colonized and infected. The characteristic of chronic wound/pressure ulcer is that it is colonized, and the infection develops depending on various factors in 5% to 80% of cases. The ability of microbes to cause infection depends on a number of factors, which include the pathogen and the host. The number and quantity of virulent factors, microbes, determines the virulence coeffi cient, which is responsible for overcoming the host’s immune system and development of infection. In the development of pressure ulcer infection, two essential microbial factors predominate, i.e. the presence of adhesin and association with biofi lm. Thus, pressure ulcer infection as a chronic wound is characterized by a polymicrobial and heterogeneous population of microbes, domination of biofi lm phenotype as a primary factor of virulence present in 90% of cases, phenotype hypervariability of species, and resistance or tolerance of the etiological agents to all types of biocides. The most significant virulence factor is biofilm. It is a corporative community of microbes with a clear architecture managed by quorum sensing molecules. It is through them that the communication between species takes place, the phenotype and virulence change, and resistance develops at the level of genome. The formation of biofi lm takes place in several stages, and the speed is measured in hours.
Microorganisms in the biofi lm are protected from the action of the host’s immune system and, likewise, they are tolerant or resistant to antibiotics, antiseptics, and stress. Bacteria causing pressure ulcer infection are characterized as opportunistic, but also primarily pathogenic. The dominance and combination of species depend on the duration, localization and stage of pressure ulcer. The predominant etiological agents are Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pyogenes, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Peptostreptococcus spp. Nowadays, multiple-resistant strains predominate, such as MRSA, Acinetobacter spp. and Pseudomonas spp. A chronic wound such as pressure ulcer is ideal for the development of infection, especially
if targeted preventive measures are not applied. The diagnosis of infection is complex and is based on the combination of primary and secondary clinical symptoms, tissue in the wound, status of the wound environment, infl ammation markers, and results of microbiological examination of targeted samples – biopsies, which are the gold standard. In reaching the diagnosis of infection, it is crucial to differentiate critical colonization from deep tissue infection, which is based on clinical criteria called NERDS-STONEES. The frequency of pressure ulcer infection is 5% to 80%, and biofi lm is present in 90% of cases. Due knowledge of the epidemiology of pressure ulcer and follow up of complications such as infection make the basis for the understanding of chronic wound, efforts to improve necessary care, prevention of development and application of a combination of treatment strategies.

Keywords

pressure ulcer; infection, pathogens; chronic wound

Hrčak ID:

167872

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/167872

Publication date:

23.10.2016.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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