Murine models of orthopedic infection featuring Staphylococcus aureus biofilm
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Published:2023-03-07
Issue:2
Volume:8
Page:81-89
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ISSN:2206-3552
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Container-title:Journal of Bone and Joint Infection
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J. Bone Joint Infect.
Author:
Dao AikenORCID, O'Donohue Alexandra K.ORCID, Vasiljevski Emily R., Bobyn Justin D., Little David G., Schindeler AaronORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Introduction: Osteomyelitis remains a major clinical challenge.
Many published rodent fracture infection models are costly compared with
murine models for rapid screening and proof-of-concept studies. We aimed to
develop a dependable and cost-effective murine bone infection model that
mimics bacterial bone infections associated with biofilm and metal implants.
Methods: Tibial drilled hole (TDH) and needle insertion surgery
(NIS) infection models were compared in C57BL/6 mice (female, N=150).
Metal pins were inserted selectively into the medullary canal adjacent to
the defect sites on the metaphysis. Free Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC 12600) or biofilm suspension
(ATCC 25923) was locally inoculated. Animals were monitored for
physiological or radiographic evidence of infection without prophylactic
antibiotics for up to 14 d. At the end point, bone swabs, soft-tissue
biopsies, and metal pins were taken for cultures. X-ray and micro-CT scans
were performed along with histology analysis. Results: TDH and NIS
both achieved a 100 % infection rate in tibiae when a metal implant was
present with injection of free bacteria. In the absence of an implant,
inoculation with a bacterial biofilm still induced a 40 %–50 % infection
rate. In contrast, freely suspended bacteria and no implant consistently
showed lower or negligible infection rates. Micro-CT analysis confirmed that
biofilm infection caused local bone loss even without a metal implant as a
nidus. Although a metal surface permissive for biofilm formation is
impermeable to create progressive bone infections in animal models, the
metal implant can be dismissed if a bacterial biofilm is used.
Conclusion: These models have a high potential utility for
modeling surgery-related osteomyelitis, with NIS being simpler to perform
than TDH.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Surgery
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