ARTICLE
Auteur(s) : Monica CORAZZA1, Elide
CARLA1, Maria Rita ROSSI2, Maria Federica
PEDNA2, Annarosa VIRGILI1
1 Dipartimento di Medicina Clinica e
Sperimentale, Sezione di Dermatologia, Università di Ferrara, Via
Savonarola 9, 44100 Ferrara, Italy
2 Laboratorio Analisi Chimico-Cliniche e
Microbiologia, Azienda Arcispedale S. Anna, Ferrara, Italy
Article accepted on 9/09/2003
Small sponges made of cellulose or nylon are commonly used in
daily hygiene as exfoliative beauty aids and in removing make-up.
After use, these sponges are generally cleansed under running water
and re-utilized.
We have recently observed a relapsing folliculitis of the trunk
and limbs in a woman and her daughter who had the habit of using
the same nylon sponge in the bathroom. In both patients cultural
examination after a cutaneous swab showed that the folliculitis was
caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Klebsiella
pneumoniae. The same bacteria were found on cultural
examination of the nylon sponge.
Similar sporadic cases of folliculitis, after the use of natural
[1-3] and synthetic sponges [4-6] are reported in the literature.
They are mostly caused by Gram-negative bacteria (above all
Pseudomonas aeruginosa). Gram-negative bacteria and
especially Pseudomonas aeruginosa are ubiquitous but show a
predilection for moist areas of human skin and easily develop in
closed-cycle water sources like whirlpools and small swimming-pools
[7, 8].
The aim of our study was to evaluate the development of potential
pathogenic bacteria after the daily use of cellulose and nylon
sponges by healthy people.
Materials and methods
25 cellulose sponges for removing face make-up and 25 nylon
sponges, of the kind commonly used for performing superficial
peeling and massage to remove superficial epithelial cells during
showering and bathing, were purchased. 25 women, mean age
44 (range 22-71) were consecutively selected. Each woman was
healthy and was free from any dermatological disease. They were
instructed to use a cellulose face sponge and a nylon body sponge
daily for a month, without taking any special sanitary precaution
and keeping them in the shower-box. All the women were provided
with the sponges and the same soap without antiseptics.
Before starting the study, a sample of 10 new cellulose
sponges and 5 new nylon sponges was tested for their bacterial
baseline population. This was performed by inoculating sponge
fragments, standardized in dimensions (6 mm punch) in
thioglycolate broth (Sclavo) for 18 hours at 36 °C.
The thioglycolate broth was then inoculated in: 5% sheep blood
agar base (Bio-Merieux) (generic medium for bacteria and yeasts),
Mac Conkey agar (Bio-Merieux) (specific medium for
Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonaceae and Gram negative non fermenting
rods) and mannitol salt-agar (specific medium for
Staphylococci, Bio-Merieux). The tube coagulase test (DID)
was utilized to differentiate Staphylococcus aureus from
Staphylococcus epidermidis. Furthermore, systems for
biochemical identification of Enterobacteriaceae, non fermenters
and Gram negative bacteria were carried out: API 32E system and API
20NE system (Bio-Merieux). Bacillus spp. was identified by
Gram stain set and catalase test (Becton Dickinson).
After one month of use all the cellulose and nylon sponges were
collected. Again, fragments from each sponge, obtained with a
sterile 6 mm punch, were submitted to the previously described
bacteriological investigations.
Results
Only colonies of Bacillus spp. and
Staphylococcus epidermidis were found in the sample of
10 cellulose face sponges and 5 nylon body sponges never
previously used.
After use, a wide variety of bacterial species was detectable in
the cellulose face sponges (Fig. 1) and in the nylon
body sponges (Fig.
2). The most common were Staphylococcus epidermidis
and Staphylococcus aureus, but there was also a notable
presence of Gram negative species; 32 isolations out of
50 in the face sponges (64%) and 25 isolations out of
48 in the body sponges (52%) were Gram negative bacteria
(mostly Enterobacter cloacae and Escherichia
coli).
Discussion
Synthetic and natural sponges are beauty aids, produced in a
wide variety of size and shapes, designed to remove make-up or
superficial epithelial cells during bathing and showering.
In our experience, as previously reported by other studies,
cellulose and nylon sponges before use are frequently sterile or
contain a limitated bacterial flora consisting only of
Bacillus spp. and Staphylococcus epidermidis [1,
9].
In our study, after a one-month period of use, bacterial species
of environmental origin, belonging prevalently to the
Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonaceae and Gram negative non fermenting
rods, developed in cultures. The only true pathogenic bacterium
found was Staphylococcus aureus; all the others were
considered opportunistic pathogenic bacteria.
Matching the results of the Figures 1 and 2 it was evident that the
most frequently found bacteria were the same in both kind of
sponges; this observation seemed to demonstrate that the
environment conditioned the bacterial growth more than the body
area, even if the possibility of hand carry-over of bacteria should
be taken in consideration.
The different material the sponges were made of (cellulose or
nylon) did not seem to influence bacterial growth. In the
literature microbiological studies performed on natural [1, 2, 8]
and synthetic sponges [6], to assess them as reservoirs and
vehicles in the transmission of potentially pathogenic bacterial
species, have been reported; according to our experience bacterial
growth is independent of the materials used in making sponges.
Environmental factors like humidity and high temperature favour
bacterial growth; in normal use, people keep their sponges in the
shower box and it is possible that the interval between showers is
not sufficient to allow them to dry completely. Furthermore
bacterial growth is favoured by the presence of soap and organic
debris like desquamated epithelial cells entrapped in sponges.
The abrasive action of sponges may traumatize the epidermis and
permit the cutaneous penetration of bacteria and development of
skin infections like folliculitis due to Gram-negative bacteria and
especially Pseudomonas aeruginosa [4-6, 8].
In conclusion, even in a healthy population, it is advisable that
sponges be restricted to personal use, regularly washed, adequately
dried, not kept in the showering area and, as some authors suggest,
submitted to periodic 10% aqueous hypochlorite bleach
decontamination [1, 8]. n
References
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