Abstract
Antibacterial creams come in a wide variety, with varying concentrations, prices, levels of activity, active ingredients, and excipients. Based on their ability to suppress the chosen bacterial strains (S. aureus, E. coli, B. subtilis, P. vulgaris) four different commercial antibacterial creams were evaluated as the most popular ones. There were two types of creams: one with gentamicin sulfate and the other with framycetin sulphate. The combination medicine creams included silver sulfadiazine, miconazole nitrate, neomycin sulfate, and chlorhexidine gluconate. In addition to being commonly utilized due to their antibacterial properties, the chosen bacterial strains are principally responsible for the majority of human illnesses and skin disorders. The study explains the four creams that were utilized, how economical they were, how well they worked against various bacterial strains, and how efficient they were whether applied singly or in combination. It also aids in determining which cream performs the best overall. In the antibacterial experiment, the disk diffusion method was used to use all four of the creams. Out of the four antibacterial creams, the study indicates that gentamicin had the highest efficacy. Among the three drugs that make up cream, gentamicin is the most economical and has the biggest zone of inhibition of all four creams combined. This study improves our knowledge of the best cream while also educating pharma providers regarding the advantages of creams.