| Literature DB >> 27574616 |
Daniel G Metcalf1, Philip G Bowler1.
Abstract
Biofilm is the predominant mode of life for bacteria and today it is implicated in numerous human diseases. A growing body of scientific and clinical evidence now exists regarding the presence of biofilm in wounds. This review summarizes the clinical experiences and in vivo evidence that implicate biofilm in delayed wound healing. The various mechanisms by which biofilm may impede healing are highlighted, including impaired epithelialization and granulation tissue formation, and reduced susceptibilities to antimicrobial agents and host defenses. Strategies to manage biofilm and encourage progression to wound healing are discussed; these include debridement and appropriate antimicrobial therapies which may be improved upon in the future with the emergence of anti-biofilm technologies.Entities:
Keywords: Biofilm; delayed healing; evidence; wound
Year: 2013 PMID: 27574616 PMCID: PMC4994495 DOI: 10.4103/2321-3868.113329
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Burns Trauma ISSN: 2321-3868
Key scientific evidence for the presence of biofilm in human wounds
| Wound type | No. | Methods | Observations | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chronic wounds | 50 | Light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) | 30 (60%) chronic wounds observed to contain biofilm | James |
| Acute wounds | 16 | Light microscopy, SEM | 1 (6%) acute wound contained biofilm | James |
| Chronic wounds | 22 | Confocal microscopy | 13 (59%) chronic wounds contained biofilm | Kirketerp-Møller |
| Chronic wounds | 2 | Fluorescence microscopy | Both samples contained biofilm | Bjarnsholt |
| Chronic wounds | 10 | Fluorescence microscopy, confocal microscopy | Fazli | |
| Chronic wounds | 10 | Fluorescence microscopy, confocal microscopy | Fazli | |
| Mixed etiologies | 15 | Fluorescence microscopy | 7 (47%) wounds contained biofilm | Han |
| Diabetic foot ulcers | 2 | Confocal microscopy | Both samples contained biofilm | Neut |
| Full-thickness burns | 11 | Light microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, SEM | Ulcerated areas and escharotomy sites contained biofilm; non-ulcerated areas did not | Kennedy |
Clinical evidence that biofilm delays wound healing
| Wound type | No. | Clinical observations | Biofilm management | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-healing surgical ulcer | 1 | Cloudy, shiny, thin film of slime, after lavage, enzymatic ointment and a silver alginate dressing | Curettage gently scraped away film; managed underlying pathophysiology | Hurlow & Bowler (2009)[ |
| Venous leg ulcer (VLU) | 1 | Thick, visible film, after lavage, collagenase debridement and a silver alginate dressing | Continual debridement plus negative pressure wound therapy and split-thickness graft | Hurlow & Bowler (2009)[ |
| VLU | 1 | Persistent, cloudy, translucent film, after a silver alginate dressing | Sodium hypochlorite wound cleanser between dressing changes | Hurlow & Bowler (2009)[ |
| Diabetic with cellulitis | 2 | Visible, opaque, pale yellow films | Antibiotics, debridement and a silver carboxymethyl cellulose dressing | Hurlow & Bowler (2012)[ |
| Highly exuding | 3 | Thick, green-tinted or translucent film, after inappropriate dressings (polyurethane, hydrogel or foam dressings) | Two wounds healed using antibiotics, debridement and a silver carboxymethyl cellulose dressing | Hurlow & Bowler (2012)[ |
| Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) | 3 | Cloudy and translucent film / opaque film / red/green film | Sharp debridement and a silver carboxylmethyl cellulose dressing | Hurlow & Bowler (2012)[ |
| Critically ischemic lower limb wounds | 190 | 77% (146) wounds healed | Combinations of sharp and ultrasonic debridement, lactoferrin/xylitol, cadexomer iodine and silver dressings | Wolcott & Rhoads (2008)[ |
| Dehisced | 4 | Healing | Sharp debridement | Wolcott |
| Lower limb traumatic in a PAD patient | 1 | Wound had become chronic with suspected biofilm | Healed over 6 months using BBWC | Wolcott |
| Traumatic chemical burn in a diabetic | 1 | Infection developed and patient was declared an amputation case | Healed in 12 weeks using debridement, systemic and topical antibiotics and silver dressings | Wolcott & Dowd (2011)[ |
| Mixed etiologies undergoing cell-based therapy | 97 | Entire graft material remained intact with biofilm suppression | Debridement and personalised topical gels containing anti-biofilm agents and antibiotics | Wolcott & Cox (2013)[ |
Figure 1:An infected traumatic leg ulcer in a diabetic patient with moderate peripheral arterial disease. Curettage was used to remove the pale yellow, slimy biofilm from the wound. Small buds of granulation tissue can be seen beneath the biofilm.
Figure 2:A dehisced surgical incision in a relatively ischemic patient. The opaque film on the wound bed (centre) re-formed daily and could be lifted off to reveal intact granular buds. Ultrasonic debridement was ineffective at disrupting or removing this thick, mature biofilm. Slough is also evident on the intact skin around the wound (top centre, top right, bottom right).
Figure 3:A dehisced mastectomy incision wound in a patient who had undergone chemotherapy. (a) Debridement in conjunction with a silver carboxymethyl cellulose dressing was used to transform a biofilm colonized wound. (b) Debridement in conjunction with a silver carboxymethyl cellulose dressing was used to transform a healing wound.
Animal evidence that biofilm delays wound healing from porcine, murine and rabbit ear wound models
| Model | Biofilm species | Observations | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Porcine acute wound |
| Challenge with antimicrobial agents confirmed the recalcitrance of biofilm bacteria | Serralta |
| Porcine acute wound |
| Indirect evidence of delayed healing, with polymorphonucleocytes observed on the surface of, but not within, biofilm | Davis |
| Porcine acute wound | Methicillin-resistant | Greater healing delays were observed due to biofilm formed by passaged MRSA strains than by parent strains; passaged strain was observed to form more biofilm than parent strain | Roche |
| Porcine partial-thickness wound | MRSA, | Interactions between MRSA and | Pastar |
| Murine burn |
| A biofilm-forming factor established | Rashid |
| Murine burn |
| Microscopic biofilm that was not readily removed by rinsing with saline | Schaber |
| Murine diabetic chronic wound |
| ( | Zhao |
| Murine diabetic chronic wound |
| ( | Zhao |
| Murine diabetic chronic wound |
| Biofilm significantly delayed wound healing, even in diabetic mice treated with insulin | Watters |
| Murine chronically infected surgical wound |
| Biofilm was highly resistant to antibiotics and undiluted sodium hypochlorite once established over several days | Wolcott |
| Murine chronically infected surgical wound | ( | Dalton | |
| Murine splinted wound | Biofilms significantly delayed epithelialization; inhibition of biofilm restored normal wound healing | Schierle | |
| Rabbit ear wound |
| Biofilm and active infection significantly delayed epithelialization and granulation tissue formation; biofilm-colonized wounds expressed significantly lower levels of inflammatory cytokines than infected wounds | Gurjala |
| Rabbit ear wound |
| Biofilm significantly delayed epithelialization and granulation tissue formation; debridement, lavage and silver sulphadiazine in combination were more effective at restoring healing than individua treatments | Seth |
| Rabbit ischemic ear wound |
| Biofilm formed readily in ischemic wounds but not in non-ischemic wounds where neutrophils and macrophages were seen | Seth |
| Rabbit ischemic ear wound | Seth | ||
| Rabbit ear wound | Two-species biofilm elicited significantly elevated inflammatory response and impaired epithelialization and granulation tissue formation compared to single-species biofilm | Seth |
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