The Antimicrobial Efficacy of Topically Applied Mafenide Acetate, Citric Acid and Wound Irrigation Solutions Lavanox and Prontosan against Pseudomonas aeruginosa

Author:

Bagheri Mahsa12,Zoric Andreas3,von Kohout Maria2,Fuchs Paul2ORCID,Schiefer Jennifer2ORCID,Opländer Christian4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Plastic and Aesthetic Surgery, Hand Surgery, HELIOS Hospital Emil von Behring, Walterhoeferstr. 11, 14165 Berlin, Germany

2. Plastic Surgery, Hand Surgery, Burn Center, Cologne-Merheim Hospital, Witten/Herdecke University, Ostmerheimer Str. 200, 51109 Cologne, Germany

3. Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery, RKH Hospital Bietigheim-Vaihingen, Riedstr. 12, 74321 Bietigheim-Bissingen, Germany

4. Institute for Research in Operative Medicine (IFOM), Cologne-Merheim Medical Center, Witten/Herdecke University, Ostmerheimer Str. 200, 51109 Cologne, Germany

Abstract

Since burn wound infections caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) lead to major complications and sepsis, this study evaluates the antimicrobial efficacy of the wound irrigation solutions Prontosan (PRT), Lavanox (LAV), citric acid (CA) and mafenide acetate (MA) using microbiology assays and an ex vivo skin wound model. In suspension assays, all the solutions showed significant reductions in bacterial number (log10 reduction: CA 5.77; LAV 4.91; PRT 4.74; MA 1.23). The biofilm assay revealed that PRT and LAV reduced biofilm formation by ~25% after a 15 min treatment, while PRT was most effective after a 24 h treatment (~68%). The number of PA in biofilms measured directly after a 15 min treatment was reduced most effectively with CA and LAV (log10 reductions ~2.5), whereas after a 24 h treatment, all solutions achieved only 1.36–1.65 log10 reductions. In the skin wound model, PRT and LAV provided the highest bacterial reduction after a 15 min treatment (log10 reduction 1.8–1.9), while MA was more effective after a 22 h treatment (log10 reduction 3.6). The results demonstrated the antimicrobial efficacy of all solutions against PA. Further investigation is needed to explore the potential clinical applications of a combination or alternating use of these solutions for infection prophylaxis and treatment of wound infections caused by PA.

Funder

Faculty of Health at Witten/Herdecke University, Germany

German Research Foundation DFG

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference43 articles.

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