AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate how triclosan-coated sutures impact the growth of bacteria relevant to wound infections in dogs, using various types of sutures and bacterial isolates.
  • Results revealed that only the triclosan-coated sutures inhibited bacterial growth, showing effective antimicrobial activity for up to 29 days, particularly against methicillin-susceptible bacteria.
  • The research concluded that while surface characteristics of sutures play a significant role in preventing bacterial adherence, triclosan coatings can improve antimicrobial protection, especially against multidrug-resistant strains, prompting the need for further clinical studies.

Article Abstract

Objective: To investigate in vitro effects of triclosan coating of suture materials on the growth of clinically relevant bacteria isolated from wounds in dogs.

Sample: 6 types of suture material and 10 isolates each of methicillin-susceptible , methicillin-resistant , , and AmpC β-lactamase and extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing from clinical wound infections.

Procedures: Isolates were cultured on Mueller-Hinton agar with 3 types of triclosan-coated suture, uncoated counterparts of the same suture types, and positive and negative controls. Zones of inhibition (ZOIs) were measured after overnight incubation. Sustained antimicrobial activity assays were performed with susceptible isolates. The ZOI measurements and durations of sustained antimicrobial activity were compared among suture types and isolates by statistical methods. Suture surface characteristics and bacterial adherence were evaluated qualitatively with scanning electron microscopy.

Results: ZOIs were generated only by triclosan-coated materials; triclosan-coated suture had sustained antimicrobial activity (inhibition) for 3 to 29 days against all tested pathogens. The ZOIs around triclosan-coated suture were significantly greater for isolates than for isolates. Bacterial adherence to uncoated polyglactin-910 was greatest, followed by triclosan-coated polyglactin-910, and then uncoated monofilament sutures, with least adherence to coated monofilament sutures.

Conclusions And Clinical Relevance: Surface characteristics of suture materials may be as important or more important than triclosan coating for microbial inhibition; however, triclosan coating appeared to affect bacterial adherence for multifilament sutures. Triclosan-coated, particularly monofilament, sutures inhibited pathogens commonly isolated from wounds of dogs, including multidrug-resistant bacteria. Further studies are required to assess clinical efficacy of triclosan-coated suture materials in vivo.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2460/ajvr.81.1.84DOI Listing

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