| Literature DB >> 22461988 |
Chunqi Jiang1, Christoph Schaudinn, David E Jaramillo, Paul Webster, J William Costerton.
Abstract
The hypothesis that a cold plasma jet has the antimicrobial effect against Enterococcus faecalis biofilms was tested in vitro. 27 hydroxyapatite discs were incubated with E. faecalis for six days to form a monoculture biofilm on the disc surface. The prepared substrata were divided into three groups: the negative control, the positive control (5.25% NaOCl solution), and the plasma treatment group. Resultant colony-forming unit counts were associated with observations of bacterial cell morphology changes using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Treatment of E. faecalis biofilm with the plasma and 5.25% NaOCl for 5 min resulted in 93.1% and 90.0% kill (P < 0.0001), respectively. SEM detected that nearly no intact bacteria were discernible for the plasma-exposed HA disc surfaces. The demonstrated bactericidal effect of the plasma with direct surface contact may be due to the enhanced oxidation by the locally produced reactive plasma species.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22461988 PMCID: PMC3302053 DOI: 10.5402/2012/295736
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Dent ISSN: 2090-4371
Figure 1(a) A prototype of the plasma source generating a 1 mm diameter plasma plume that can be hand touched without causing pain or burning. (b) The plasma plume impinging to an HA disc, 1 cm below the plasma device nozzle.
Figure 2Microbiological analysis: the viable counts (CFU/mL) of E. faecalis for all treatment protocols after log transformation (ANOVA, P < 0.0001).
Figure 3SEM. (a) Uniformly distributed E. faecalis biofilms on HA discs after the treatment of gas flow (He/(1%)O2, 1 SLPM, 5 min) (the negative control). (b) Biofilms in the negative control group at higher magnification (20,000x): bacteria were adsorbed onto the HA surface and embedded in a self-produced extracellular matrix, as in a typical biofilm. (c) HA surface after direct plasma exposure (He/(1%)O2 plasma, 5 SLPM, 5 min). (d) An area of the plasma-treated HA surface at higher magnification (20.000×): debris and fused cell bodies (arrow 1) were predominantly observed. Morphologically intact bacteria (arrow 2) were rarely spotted. (e) HA surface after treatment of 5.25% NaOCl for 5 min (the positive control). (f) Same biofilms of the positive control group at higher magnification (20.000×): most of the remaining bacteria appear morphologically intact (arrow 3). Deformed or fused cell bodies (arrow 4) were discernible but few.