The aim of this study was to evaluate whether
coating titanium discs with selenium in the form of sodium selenite decreased
bacterial adhesion of Staphylococcus aureus and Staph.
epidermidis and impeded osteoblastic cell growth. In order to evaluate bacterial adhesion, sterile titanium discs
were coated with increasing concentrations of selenium and incubated
with bacterial solutions of Staph. aureus (ATCC
29213) and Staph. epidermidis (DSM 3269) and stained
with Safranin-O. The effect of selenium on osteoblastic cell growth
was also observed. The adherence of MG-63 cells on the coated discs
was detected by staining with Safranin-O. The proportion of covered
area was calculated with imaging software. The tested Staph. aureus strain showed a significantly
reduced attachment on titanium discs with 0.5% (p = 0.011) and 0.2%
(p = 0.02)
Biofilm-related infection is a major complication that occurs in orthopaedic surgery. Various treatments are available but efficacy to eradicate infections varies significantly. A systematic review was performed to evaluate therapeutic interventions combating biofilm-related infections on in vivo animal models. Literature research was performed on PubMed and Embase databases. Keywords used for search criteria were “bone AND biofilm”. Information on the species of the animal model, bacterial strain, evaluation of biofilm and bone infection, complications, key findings on observations, prevention, and treatment of biofilm were extracted.Aims
Methods