Biofilms and Urinary Tract Infections

A special issue of Antibiotics (ISSN 2079-6382). This special issue belongs to the section "Antibiofilm Strategies".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 December 2024 | Viewed by 405

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
Policlinico di Abano, Piazza Cristoforo Colombo 1, 35031 Abano (PD), Italy
Interests: antibiotic therapy; antimicrobial resistance; opportunistic infections
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Guest Editor
Laboratory for Process Engineering, Environment, Biotechnology and Energy (LEPABE), Department of Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto, 4099-002 Porto, Portugal
Interests: bacterial infection; multidrug-resistance; biofilms; phytochemicals; strategies of biofilm prevention and control; quorum-sensing; quorum-quenching; virulence attenuators; drug-repurposing; molecular docking
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Recurrent idiopathic cystitis is similar to repeated urinary tract infections related to the presence of a chronic indwelling urinary catheter, where it is believed that a biofilm covering the indwelling catheter is the reason for the constant bacteriuria of these patients.

Biofilms consist of microcolonies of bacteria held together by extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), in which heterogeneity is not fully described but partially specific for the different bacteria. In recurrent idiopathic cystitis, the formation of a biofilm with intracellular bacterial communities in the vesical mucosa that may go undetected using standard urine cultures and persist despite antibiotic therapy is hypothesized.

Up to now, detecting the bacteria in urine is easily performed while the EPS part of the biofilms is presumed to be present but is rarely looked for. It is plausible that EPS fragments are present in the urine as biofilm urinary biomarkers if actively searched for and studied in patients with indwelling urinary catheters.

Then, these biofilm urinary biomarkers could be used in patients with recurrent idiopathic urinary infections (without indwelling catheters) where the standard treatment of cystitis often fails.

This is a call for papers about urinary biomarkers of biofilm formation that are correlated with different pathogens.

Dr. Dino Sgarabotto
Dr. Anabela Borges
Guest Editors

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