Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > The Detection of Bacteria and Bacterial Biofilm...
View graph of relations

The Detection of Bacteria and Bacterial Biofilms in Punctal Plug Holes.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

The Detection of Bacteria and Bacterial Biofilms in Punctal Plug Holes. / Sugita, Jiro; Yokoi, Norihiko; Fullwood, Nigel J. et al.
In: Cornea, Vol. 20, No. 4, 05.2001, p. 362-365.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Sugita, J, Yokoi, N, Fullwood, NJ, Quantock, AJ, Takada, Y, Nakamura, Y & Kinoshita, S 2001, 'The Detection of Bacteria and Bacterial Biofilms in Punctal Plug Holes.', Cornea, vol. 20, no. 4, pp. 362-365. <http://www.corneajrnl.com/pt/re/cornea/abstract.00003226-200105000-00005.htm>

APA

Sugita, J., Yokoi, N., Fullwood, N. J., Quantock, A. J., Takada, Y., Nakamura, Y., & Kinoshita, S. (2001). The Detection of Bacteria and Bacterial Biofilms in Punctal Plug Holes. Cornea, 20(4), 362-365. http://www.corneajrnl.com/pt/re/cornea/abstract.00003226-200105000-00005.htm

Vancouver

Sugita J, Yokoi N, Fullwood NJ, Quantock AJ, Takada Y, Nakamura Y et al. The Detection of Bacteria and Bacterial Biofilms in Punctal Plug Holes. Cornea. 2001 May;20(4):362-365.

Author

Sugita, Jiro ; Yokoi, Norihiko ; Fullwood, Nigel J. et al. / The Detection of Bacteria and Bacterial Biofilms in Punctal Plug Holes. In: Cornea. 2001 ; Vol. 20, No. 4. pp. 362-365.

Bibtex

@article{2afee7978e394267bbf59deaf34527f6,
title = "The Detection of Bacteria and Bacterial Biofilms in Punctal Plug Holes.",
abstract = "Purpose. An investigation into bacterial biofilm formation on and in punctal plugs. Methods. The study involved 21 patients with severe dry eye whose puncta were occluded by the use of punctal plugs. Of these, 15 had Sjogren's syndrome, 3 had non-Sjogren's syndrome, 2 had Stevens-Johnson syndrome, and 1 had graft-versus-host disease. From 17 of the 21 subjects, 18 samples of material were extracted from the holes of the punctal plugs (16 unilateral and 1 bilateral) and were subjected to enrichment culture. Nineteen punctal plugs were removed and processed for electron microscopy: 15 by scanning electron microscopy, and 4 by transmission electron microscopy. Results. Positive cultures were found in 8 of 18 (44%) samples of the material extracted from the holes of punctal plugs. In six of these eight cases (75%) the cultured bacterial species was Staphylococcus epidermidis, whereas in the other two cases (25%) it was S. aureus. In 8 of the 15 punctal plugs examined by scanning electron microscopy and in the material extracted from 1 plug that was examined by transmission electron microscopy, there was clear evidence of bacterial colonization. Conclusion. Careful observation of patients with punctal plugs is important. If material accumulates in or on a punctal plug, it may contain bacteria and may form a bacterial biofilm. In these cases, replacement of the plug, clearing of the hole, or an alternative treatment should be considered.",
author = "Jiro Sugita and Norihiko Yokoi and Fullwood, {Nigel J.} and Quantock, {Andrew J.} and Yoko Takada and Yo Nakamura and Shigeru Kinoshita",
year = "2001",
month = may,
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "362--365",
journal = "Cornea",
issn = "0277-3740",
publisher = "Lippincott Williams and Wilkins",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Detection of Bacteria and Bacterial Biofilms in Punctal Plug Holes.

AU - Sugita, Jiro

AU - Yokoi, Norihiko

AU - Fullwood, Nigel J.

AU - Quantock, Andrew J.

AU - Takada, Yoko

AU - Nakamura, Yo

AU - Kinoshita, Shigeru

PY - 2001/5

Y1 - 2001/5

N2 - Purpose. An investigation into bacterial biofilm formation on and in punctal plugs. Methods. The study involved 21 patients with severe dry eye whose puncta were occluded by the use of punctal plugs. Of these, 15 had Sjogren's syndrome, 3 had non-Sjogren's syndrome, 2 had Stevens-Johnson syndrome, and 1 had graft-versus-host disease. From 17 of the 21 subjects, 18 samples of material were extracted from the holes of the punctal plugs (16 unilateral and 1 bilateral) and were subjected to enrichment culture. Nineteen punctal plugs were removed and processed for electron microscopy: 15 by scanning electron microscopy, and 4 by transmission electron microscopy. Results. Positive cultures were found in 8 of 18 (44%) samples of the material extracted from the holes of punctal plugs. In six of these eight cases (75%) the cultured bacterial species was Staphylococcus epidermidis, whereas in the other two cases (25%) it was S. aureus. In 8 of the 15 punctal plugs examined by scanning electron microscopy and in the material extracted from 1 plug that was examined by transmission electron microscopy, there was clear evidence of bacterial colonization. Conclusion. Careful observation of patients with punctal plugs is important. If material accumulates in or on a punctal plug, it may contain bacteria and may form a bacterial biofilm. In these cases, replacement of the plug, clearing of the hole, or an alternative treatment should be considered.

AB - Purpose. An investigation into bacterial biofilm formation on and in punctal plugs. Methods. The study involved 21 patients with severe dry eye whose puncta were occluded by the use of punctal plugs. Of these, 15 had Sjogren's syndrome, 3 had non-Sjogren's syndrome, 2 had Stevens-Johnson syndrome, and 1 had graft-versus-host disease. From 17 of the 21 subjects, 18 samples of material were extracted from the holes of the punctal plugs (16 unilateral and 1 bilateral) and were subjected to enrichment culture. Nineteen punctal plugs were removed and processed for electron microscopy: 15 by scanning electron microscopy, and 4 by transmission electron microscopy. Results. Positive cultures were found in 8 of 18 (44%) samples of the material extracted from the holes of punctal plugs. In six of these eight cases (75%) the cultured bacterial species was Staphylococcus epidermidis, whereas in the other two cases (25%) it was S. aureus. In 8 of the 15 punctal plugs examined by scanning electron microscopy and in the material extracted from 1 plug that was examined by transmission electron microscopy, there was clear evidence of bacterial colonization. Conclusion. Careful observation of patients with punctal plugs is important. If material accumulates in or on a punctal plug, it may contain bacteria and may form a bacterial biofilm. In these cases, replacement of the plug, clearing of the hole, or an alternative treatment should be considered.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 20

SP - 362

EP - 365

JO - Cornea

JF - Cornea

SN - 0277-3740

IS - 4

ER -