Status
Conditions
About
The purpose of this study is to determine whether the mix of microbial species isolated from biofilm-clogged voice prostheses is specific to each participant, whether the microbes are orally-derived and whether the presence of specific species is a predictor of the frequency with which patients discard devices due to malfunction. The microbes isolated from discarded devices will be used to test the antimicrobial properties of newly-developed medical silicones.
Full description
This study has three primary objectives and one secondary objective:
Primary Objectives
Secondary Objective
• To study the interactions that occur within the social group of microbes isolated from each voice prosthesis to learn a) whether these species are interdependent, b) whether they cooperate with each other in order to build biofilms and b) which species produce compounds that physically degrade medical polymers.
STUDY DESIGN
Four hypotheses will be addressed by this study:
These hypotheses will be addressed by collection of discarded devices from participants who are users of voice prostheses and registered at the Speech and Voice Clinic, Aberdeen Royal Infirmary (up to 27 people). Participants will be requested to donate discarded devices, mouthwash samples and simple data on recent antimicrobial or antacid treatments, and the use of dentures. The microbes colonising prostheses and contained within mouthwash samples will be isolated and identified and the association between microbial species and patient data over time will be analysed. Microbes will be stored as clinical isolates and used to test biofilm establishment and maintenance on silicones with modified surfaces designed to reduce biofouling.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
14 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal