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Silver as an Antibiotic-Independent Antimicrobial: Review of Current Formulations and Clinical Relevance. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The rise of multi-drug-resistant organisms has led to renewed interest in silver as a safer alternative to traditional antibiotics, given its lower risk for developing bacterial resistance and its various modes of action.
  • - Despite its antimicrobial benefits, high concentrations of silver can be toxic, prompting research into new formulations that ensure safer and more predictable use in clinical settings.
  • - A thorough review of different silver formulations highlighted their mechanisms, clinical applications, and toxicity risks, identifying a trend where newer formulations may offer better clinical potential, but further in vivo studies are needed to confirm their effectiveness.

Article Abstract

The increase of multi-drug-resistant organisms has revived the use of silver as an alternative antibiotic-independent antimicrobial. Although silver's multimodal mechanism of action provides low risk for bacterial resistance, high local and uncontrolled concentrations have shown toxicity. This has resulted in efforts to develop novel silver formulations that are safer and more predictable in their application. Optimization of silver as an antimicrobial is crucial given the growing resistance profile against antibiotics. This article reviews formulations of silver used as antimicrobials, focusing on the mechanisms of action, potential for toxicity, and clinical applications. A search of four electronic databases (PubMed, Embase, MEDLINE, and Cochrane Library) was conducted for relevant studies up to January 2022. Searches were conducted for the following types of silver: ionic, nanoparticles, colloidal, silver nitrate, silver sulfadiazine, silver oxide, silver carboxylate, and AQUACEL (ConvaTec, Berkshire, UK). Sources were compiled based on title and abstract and screened for inclusion based on relevance and study design. A review of the antimicrobial activity and uses of ionic silver, silver nanoparticles, colloidal silver, silver nitrate, silver sulfadiazine, silver oxide, Aquacel, and silver carboxylate was conducted. The mechanisms of action, clinical uses, and potential for toxicity were studied, and general trends between earlier and more advanced formulations noted. Early forms of silver have more limited utility because of their uncontrolled release of silver ions and potential for systemic toxicity. Multiple new formulations show promise; however, there is a need for more prospective in vivo studies to validate the clinical potential of these formulations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/sur.2022.229DOI Listing

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