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2000
Volume 5, Issue 2
  • ISSN: 1574-891X
  • E-ISSN: 2212-4071

Abstract

In spite of the improvements in transfusion safety occurred in the last decades, platelet septic transfusions still represent a cause for concern. Microbial screening of blood products cannot ensure transfusion sterility, so that pathogen inactivation methods and a timely management of infectious events actually play the most relevant role. Biofilm production has been associated to several human illnesses; also, it promotes bacterial adherence to platelet bags and colonization of recipient's catheter after transfusion. Therefore, facing biofilm communities is required to reduce the contamination risk and the occurrence of post-infusion events. In this context, the use of tigecycline as a wide-spectrum antibiofilm drug is discussed, along with recent patents about biofilm treatment by quorum-sensing blockers, bacteriophage-based therapy and antibiofilm oral compounds.

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/content/journals/pri/10.2174/157489110791233531
2010-06-01
2024-10-11
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/content/journals/pri/10.2174/157489110791233531
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  • Article Type: Research Article
Keyword(s): bacteremia; biofilm; glycylglycine; platelet; sepsis; septicaemia; tigecycline; Transfusion
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