Pilot clinical trial: propidium monoazide PCR quantifies reduction of the viable bacterial load after antiseptic preparation of canine oral mucosa

Author:

Nye Alicia K.1,Suchodolski Jan2,Hong Min-Pyo2,Park So Young2,Thieman Mankin Kelley M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX

2. Gastrointestinal Laboratory, School of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX

Abstract

Abstract OBJECTIVE A pilot clinical study to evaluate the use of propidium monoazide PCR (PMA-PCR) in quantifying a reduction of bacterial load after antiseptic use on the canine oral mucosa and skin, comparison of quantitative PCR (qPCR) to PMA-PCR, and comparison of patterns seen between PCR methods and bacterial culture. ANIMALS Client-owned dogs (n = 10) undergoing general anesthesia and intravenous catheter placement. PROCEDURES The oral mucosa and antebrachial skin of each dog underwent swabs for culture, qPCR, and PMA-PCR before and after antiseptic preparation of each site. Reduction in bacterial load between sampling times was evaluated for each quantification method. RESULTS All testing methods found a significant decrease in bacterial load from oral mucosa after antiseptic preparation (culture P = .0020, qPCR P = .0039, PMA-PCR P = .0039). PMA-PCR had a significantly greater reduction of bacterial load after preparation than qPCR (P = .0494). Only culture detected a significant reduction after preparation of the skin (culture P = .0039, qPCR P = .3125, PMA-PCR P = .0703). CLINICAL RELEVANCE PMA-PCR was able to quantify a reduction of bacterial load after antiseptic preparation of the high-bacterial load environment, with a pattern similar to that of culture, and was more specific than qPCR for detecting viable bacterial load. The results of this study support the use of PMA-PCR for antiseptic effectiveness studies performed on a high-bacterial load environment, such as canine oral mucosa.

Publisher

American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA)

Subject

General Veterinary,General Medicine

Reference15 articles.

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