Impact of negative‐pressure wound therapy on bacterial behaviour and bioburden in a contaminated full‐thickness wound |
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Authors: | Zhirui Li Qingwen Yu Song Wang Guoqi Wang Tongtong Li Pei‐fu Tang Daohong Liu |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Orthopedics, The General Hospital of People''s Liberation Army, Beijing China ; 2. Department of Orthopedics, Chinese PLA General Hospital and Hainan Branch, Sanya China ; 3. Department of Orthopedics, Beijing China ; 4. Medical College, Nankai University, Tianjin China ; 5. Department of Orthopedics, Tianjin Hospital, Tianjin China |
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Abstract: | The use of negative‐pressure wound therapy (NPWT) has displayed significant clinical benefits in the healing of infected wounds. However, the effects of NPWT on bacterial colonisation and infection of traumatic wounds has been controversial. The aim of this study is to evaluate the impact of NPWT treatment in rabbits with a contaminated full‐thickness wound on bacterial behaviour, including colony morphology, spatial distribution, fissional proliferation, and bacterial bioburden. Full‐thickness wounds were created on the back of rabbits, and were inoculated with bioluminescent Staphylococcus aureus. The wounds were treated with sterile gauze dressings and NPWT with continuous negative pressure (−125 mm Hg). Wound samples were harvested on days 0 (6 hours after bacterial inoculation), 2, 4, 6, and 8 at the centre of wound beds before irrigation. Scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analyses were performed to determine the characteristic bacteriology. Laser scanning confocal microscopy was performed to obtain bioluminescent images, which were used to observe spatial distribution of the GFP‐labelled S. aureus within the tissue and quantify the bacterial bioburden. NPWT resulted in sparse amounts of scattered bacteria on the wound surface or as sparsely spaced single colonies within the tissue. Wound bioburden on day 8 in the NPWT and gauze groups was 34.6 ± 5.5% and 141.9 ± 15.4% of the baseline values (N = 6), respectively (P < .0001). TEM showed a lack of S. aureus active fission within NPWT‐treated tissue. NPWT can impact S. aureus colony morphology and spatial distribution both on the surface and within wound tissue, and reduce S. aureus as early as 48 hours after therapy initiation. Additionally, NPWT inhibits bacterial fissional proliferation in microcolonies. |
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Keywords: | bioluminescent imaging contamination infection negative‐pressure wound therapy wound management |
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