2009
DOI: 10.1002/ppul.21011
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Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms in the respiratory tract of cystic fibrosis patients

Abstract: The present study was undertaken to investigate the appearance and location of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in the cystic fibrosis (CF) lung and in sputum. Samples include preserved tissues of CF patients who died due to chronic P. aeruginosa lung infection prior to the advent of intensive antibiotic therapy, explanted lungs from 3 intensively treated chronically P. aeruginosa infected CF patients and routine sputum from 77 chronically P. aeruginosa infected CF patients. All samples were investigated microscopically… Show more

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Cited by 690 publications
(698 citation statements)
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“…This treatment strategy is inherently biased towards aerobic microbes that grow on media selected by clinical microbiologists (Burns and Rolain, 2014). There is growing evidence that CF microbes survive in a low oxygen environment and many grow anaerobically deep in the mucus plugs of CF lungs (Worlitzsch et al, 2002(Worlitzsch et al, , 2009Bjarnsholt et al, 2009;Lipuma, 2010). Thus conventional culture on microbiological media misses important components of the CF microbial community that may contribute to exacerbations and provides antibiotic resistance profiles from microbes not grown in a state in which they cause disease.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This treatment strategy is inherently biased towards aerobic microbes that grow on media selected by clinical microbiologists (Burns and Rolain, 2014). There is growing evidence that CF microbes survive in a low oxygen environment and many grow anaerobically deep in the mucus plugs of CF lungs (Worlitzsch et al, 2002(Worlitzsch et al, , 2009Bjarnsholt et al, 2009;Lipuma, 2010). Thus conventional culture on microbiological media misses important components of the CF microbial community that may contribute to exacerbations and provides antibiotic resistance profiles from microbes not grown in a state in which they cause disease.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…P. aeruginosa is able to survive by switching to the biofilm mode of growth (Figures 3, 4), which provides tolerance to the inflammatory defense mechanism and antibiotic therapy. Biofilm adaptation also allows survival in the aerobic respiratory zone, the conductive zone of the lungs which contain anaerobic sputum, and the paranasal sinuses where the mucus also has a decreased oxygen concentration [2][3][35][36][37][38][39][40]. During the adaptation, mucoid (biofilm mode of growth) and non-mucoid phenotypes are split off due to mutations ( Figure 5, Table 3).…”
Section: Prophylaxis and Treatment Of P Aeruginosa Biofilms In Cf Lumentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Biofilm growth occurs on natural surfaces such as teeth [4], heart valves (endocarditis) [5], in the lungs of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients causing chronic bronchopneumonia [2], in the middle ear in patients with chronic and secretory otitis media [6][7], in chronic rhinosinusitis [8], in chronic The bold fonts indicate biofilm specific features [3].…”
Section: The Occurrence and Architecture Of Bacterial Biofilmsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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