BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Viscous lidocaine interferes with ocular surface antisepsis. The current study was designed to evaluate the impact on surface antisepsis of different application sequences with lidocaine gel and povidone-iodine solution. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Blood agar plates inoculated with Staphylococcus epidermidis were treated with varying sequences of 2% lidocaine gel and 5% povidone-iodine solution. The plates were then incubated at 37°C for 24 hours and bacterial growth was determined. RESULTS: Plates on which povidone-iodine was applied alone or prior to lidocaine gel demonstrated no bacterial growth regardless of whether the antiseptic was retained on the plate for 5 seconds or for 30 seconds. There was no statistically significant difference between bacterial growth on plates not treated with povidone-iodine and on plates treated with lidocaine gel alone or prior to povidone-iodine (P = .553 and P = .485, respectively). CONCLUSION: Povidone-iodine effectively reduces bacterial counts when applied alone or prior to lidocaine gel. Lidocaine gel was confirmed to be a barrier to antisepsis when administered prior to povidone-iodine. Copyright 2011, SLACK Incorporated.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Viscous lidocaine interferes with ocular surface antisepsis. The current study was designed to evaluate the impact on surface antisepsis of different application sequences with lidocaine gel and povidone-iodine solution. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Blood agar plates inoculated with Staphylococcus epidermidis were treated with varying sequences of 2% lidocaine gel and 5% povidone-iodine solution. The plates were then incubated at 37°C for 24 hours and bacterial growth was determined. RESULTS: Plates on which povidone-iodine was applied alone or prior to lidocaine gel demonstrated no bacterial growth regardless of whether the antiseptic was retained on the plate for 5 seconds or for 30 seconds. There was no statistically significant difference between bacterial growth on plates not treated with povidone-iodine and on plates treated with lidocaine gel alone or prior to povidone-iodine (P = .553 and P = .485, respectively). CONCLUSION:Povidone-iodine effectively reduces bacterial counts when applied alone or prior to lidocaine gel. Lidocaine gel was confirmed to be a barrier to antisepsis when administered prior to povidone-iodine. Copyright 2011, SLACK Incorporated.
Authors: Maxwell S Stem; Prethy Rao; Ivan J Lee; Maria A Woodward; Lisa J Faia; Jeremy D Wolfe; Antonio Capone; Douglas Covert; A Bawa Dass; Kimberly A Drenser; Bruce R Garretson; Tarek S Hassan; Alan Margherio; Kean T Oh; Paul V Raephaelian; Sandeep Randhawa; Scott Sneed; Michael T Trese; Sunita Yedavally; George A Williams; Alan J Ruby Journal: Ophthalmol Retina Date: 2018-09-25
Authors: Julia Xia; Riley J Lyons; Mung Yan Lin; Yousuf M Khalifa; Christopher N LaRock Journal: J Cataract Refract Surg Date: 2020-07 Impact factor: 3.351
Authors: Andrei Theodor Balasoiu; Ovidiu Mircea Zlatian; Alice Elena Ghenea; Livia Davidescu; Alina Lungu; Andreea Loredana Golli; Anca-Loredana Udriștoiu; Maria Balasoiu Journal: Antibiotics (Basel) Date: 2022-07-06