| Literature DB >> 19390905 |
Alex C McLaren1, Matt Nugent, Kostas Economopoulos, Himanshu Kaul, Brent L Vernon, Ryan McLemore.
Abstract
Since low-dose antibiotic-loaded bone cement (ALBC) was approved by the FDA for second-stage reimplantation after infected arthroplasties in 2003, commercially premixed low-dose ALBC has become available in the United States. However, surgeons continue to mix ALBC by hand. We presumed hand-mixed ALBC was not as homogeneous as commercially premixed ALBC. We assessed homogeneity by determining the variation in antibiotic elution by location in a batch, from premixed and hand-mixed formulations of low-dose ALBC. Four hand-mixed methodologies were used: (1) suspension--antibiotic powder in the liquid monomer; (2) no-mix--antibiotic powder added but not mixed with the polymer powder before adding monomer; (3) hand-stirred--antibiotic powder stirred into the polymer powder before the monomer was added; and (4) bowl-mix--antibiotic powder mixed into polymer powder using a commercial mixing bowl before the monomer was added. Antibiotic elution was measured using the Kirby-Bauer bioassay. None of the mixing methods had consistently dissimilar homogeneity of antibiotic distribution from the others. Based upon our data we conclude hand-mixed low-dose ALBC is not less homogeneous than commercially premixed formulations.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19390905 PMCID: PMC2690765 DOI: 10.1007/s11999-009-0847-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Orthop Relat Res ISSN: 0009-921X Impact factor: 4.176