Detailed Information on Publication Record
2005
In vitro testing of vancomycin - gentamicin loaded bone cement to prevent prosthetic joint infection
GALLO, Jiří, Milan KOLÁŘ, Anthony V. FLORSCHÜTZ, Radek NOVOTNÝ, Roman PANTŮČEK et. al.Basic information
Original name
In vitro testing of vancomycin - gentamicin loaded bone cement to prevent prosthetic joint infection
Name in Czech
Testování kostního cementu plněného vankomycinem-gentamicinem pro prevenci kloubních protetických infekcí
Authors
GALLO, Jiří (203 Czech Republic), Milan KOLÁŘ (203 Czech Republic), Anthony V. FLORSCHÜTZ (840 United States of America), Radek NOVOTNÝ (203 Czech Republic), Roman PANTŮČEK (203 Czech Republic, guarantor) and Michaela KESSELOVÁ (703 Slovakia)
Edition
Biomedical Papers, Olomouc, Palacký University, 2005, 1213-8118
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Článek v odborném periodiku
Field of Study
Genetics and molecular biology
Country of publisher
Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
References:
RIV identification code
RIV/00216224:14310/05:00013848
Organization unit
Faculty of Science
Keywords in English
Prosthetic joint infection; Polymethylmethacrylate; Antibiotic loaded cement; Vancomycin;Gentamicin; Staphylococcus aureus; Staphylococcus epidermidis
Tags
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 15/2/2008 09:37, prof. RNDr. Roman Pantůček, Ph.D.
V originále
Sepsis is a greatly feared complication of total joint arthroplasty. One key question is how to prevent periopera-tive bacterial adherence, and therefore the potential for infectious complications. The objective of our study was to appraise the emerging capacity of staphylococcal survival on prosthetic materials and to analyze the in vitro eects of gentamicin and vancomycin loaded polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) cement on bacterial adherence and growth. Hospital acquired staphylococcal strains were systematically inoculated on four orthopedic materials (ultrahigh mo-lecular weight polyethylene, PMMA without antibiotic, commercially produced PMMA loaded with gentamicin, and manually mixed PMMA loaded with gentamicin and vancomycin). Staphylococci were identied using culture and biochemical tests. The inoculated material was allowed to incubate in a liquid broth growth media and subsequently prepared for scanning electron microscopy and bacterial growth quantication. Materials without antibiotics showed evidence of staphylococcal growth. PMMA loaded with only gentamicin grew methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Gentamicin-vancomycin loaded PMMA completely inhibited any bacterial growth.Low-dose gentamicin-vancomycin loaded PMMA prevents staphylococcal colonization better than commercially manufactured PMMA loaded with gentamicin. We recommend this combination in high-risk procedures and revision surgeries requiring bone cement.
In Czech
neuvedeno
Links
MSM0021622415, plan (intention) |
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