Differential susceptibility of catheter biomaterials to biofilm-associated infections and their remedy by drug-encapsulated Eudragit RL100 nanoparticles

Date

2019-10-15

Authors

Pandey, Vivek Kumar
Srivastava, Kumar Rohit
Ajmal, Gufran
Thakur, Vijay Kumar
Gupta, Vijai Kumar
Upadhyay, Siddh Nath
Mishra, Pradeep Kumar

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

1661-6596

Format

Free to read from

Citation

Pandey VK, Srivastava KR, Ajmal G, et al., (2019) Differential susceptibility of catheter biomaterials to biofilm-associated infections and their remedy by drug-encapsulated Eudragit RL100 nanoparticles. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Volume 20, Issue 20, October 2019. Article number 5110

Abstract

Biofilms are the cause of major bacteriological infections in patients. The complex architecture of Escherichia coli (E. coli) biofilm attached to the surface of catheters has been studied and found to depend on the biomaterial’s surface properties. The SEM micrographs and water contact angle analysis have revealed that the nature of the surface a ects the growth and extent of E. coli biofilm formation. In vitro studies have revealed that the Gram-negative E. coli adherence to implanted biomaterials takes place in accordance with hydrophobicity, i.e., latex > silicone > polyurethane > stainless steel. Permanent removal of E. coli biofilm requires 50 to 200 times more gentamicin sulfate (G-S) than the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) to remove 90% of E. coli biofilm (MBIC90). Here, in vitro eradication of biofilm-associated infection on biomaterials has been done by Eudragit RL100 encapsulated gentamicin sulfate (E-G-S) nanoparticle of range 140 nm. It is 10–20 times more e ective against E. coli biofilm-associated infections eradication than normal unentrapped G-S. Thus, Eudragit RL100 mediated drug delivery system provides a promising way to reduce the cost of treatment with a higher drug therapeutic index.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

E. coli, biofilm, nanoparticle-mediated drug delivery, antibiotics, catheters, biomaterials

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

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