Complementary Effect of Non-Persistent Silver Nano-Architectures and Chlorhexidine on Infected Wound Healing

Surgical site infection (SSI) substantially contributes each year to patients' morbidity and mortality, accounting for about 15% of all nosocomial infections. SSI drastically increases the rehab stint and expenses while jeopardizing health outcomes. Besides prevention, the treatment regime reli...

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Published in:Biomedicines Vol. 9; no. 9; p. 1215
Main Authors: Pernakov, Mykola, Ermini, Maria Laura, Sulaieva, Oksana, Cassano, Domenico, Santucci, Marco, Husak, Yevhenia, Korniienko, Viktoriia, Giannone, Giulia, Yusupova, Aziza, Liubchak, Iryna, Hristova, Maria Teodora, Savchenko, Anton, Holubnycha, Viktoriia, Voliani, Valerio, Pogorielov, Maksym
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Switzerland MDPI AG 14-09-2021
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Summary:Surgical site infection (SSI) substantially contributes each year to patients' morbidity and mortality, accounting for about 15% of all nosocomial infections. SSI drastically increases the rehab stint and expenses while jeopardizing health outcomes. Besides prevention, the treatment regime relies on an adequate antibiotic therapy. On the other hand, resistant bacterial strains have currently reached up to 34.3% of the total infections, and this percentage grows annually, reducing the efficacy of the common treatment schemes. Thus, new antibacterial strategies are urgently demanded. Here, we demonstrated in rats the effectiveness of non-persistent silver nano-architectures (AgNAs) in infected wound healing together with their synergistic action in combination with chlorhexidine. Besides the in vivo efficacy evaluation, we performed analysis of the bacteriological profile of purulent wound, histological evaluations, and macrophages polarization quantifications to further validate our findings and elucidate the possible mechanisms of AgNAs action on wound healing. These findings open the way for the composition of robust multifunctional nanoplatforms for the translation of safe and efficient topical treatments of SSI.
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ISSN:2227-9059
2227-9059
DOI:10.3390/biomedicines9091215