| Literature DB >> 27899142 |
Gang Liu1,2, Si Chen1,2, Jun Fang3, Baoshan Xu1,2, Shuang Li1, Yonghong Hao1, Naif A Al-Dhabi4, Shucai Deng5,6, Veeramuthu Duraipandiyan4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surgical site infections are common and devastating complications after implants related surgeries. Staphylococcus aureus contamination is a leading cause of surgical site infections. This study aims at assessing the effect of vancomycin microspheres on reducing Staphylococcus aureus infection in an in vivo rabbit model.Entities:
Keywords: Staphylococcus aureus; Surgical site infections; Vancomycin microspheres
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27899142 PMCID: PMC5129598 DOI: 10.1186/s40360-016-0105-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pharmacol Toxicol ISSN: 2050-6511 Impact factor: 2.483
Postoperative surgical site infection and implant-related infection incidence in the control, vancomycin, and vancomycin microspheres groups
| Treatment ( | Total Sites | Surgical site infection | Implant infection | Non-infection |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Control | 13 | 10(76.9%)a | 8(61.5%)a | 3(23.1%)a |
| Vancomycin | 13 | 4(30.8%)ab | 2(15.4%)ab | 9(69.2%)ab |
| Vancomycin microspheres | 13 | 2(15.4%)b | 0(0.0%)b | 11(84.6%)b |
|
| 0.004 | <0.001 | 0.004 |
abMeans with different letters within a column differ significantly (P < 0.05)
Bacterial culture analysis of different samples in Log10 values
| (Log10 CFU/g tissue) | Control | Vancomycin | Vancomycin microspheres | F |
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mean | sd | mean | sd | mean | sd | |||
| Fascia | 5.810 | 0.285 | 6.067 | 0.208 | 6.150 | 0.212 | 2.012 | 0.176 |
| Hematoma | 6.820 | 0.244 | 7.075 | 0.320 | 6.650 | 0.354 | 1.940 | 0.183 |
| Implant | 5.525 | 0.328 | 5.450 | 0.212 | 0.090 | 0.772 | ||
| Bone | 5.500a | 0.283 | 6.233b | 0.252 | 5.800 | 7.749 | 0.011 | |
abMeans with different letters within a row differ significantly (P < 0.05)
Fig. 1Vancomycin concentration in vancomycin and vancomycin microsphere groups. a Local vancomycin in vancomycin group was highest at 12 h with a concentration of 148 μg/ml and dropped to 1.2 μg/ml quickly at 24 h. b In vancomycin microsphere group, the release of vancomycin (VR) was highest at 24 h and maintained a concentration of 3.0 μg/ml after 72 h. The concentration of vancomycin remaining in the microsphere (VM) dropped constantly