Effects of Silver-based Wound Dressings on the Bacterial Flora in Chronic Leg Ulcers and Its Susceptibility In Vitro to Silver

Authors

  • Susanne Sütterlin
  • Eva Tano
  • Agneta Bergsten
  • Anna-Britta Tallberg
  • Åsa Melhus

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-1170

Keywords:

silver, silver-resistance, wound dressing, ESBL, derepressed mutant.

Abstract

Silver-based dressings have been used extensively in wound management in recent years, but data on their antimicrobial activity in the clinical setting are limited. In order to explore their effects on chronic leg ulcer flora, 14 ulcers were cultured after at least 3 weeks treatment with Aquacel Ag(®) or Acticoat(®). Phenotypic and genetic silver resistance were investigated in a total of 56 isolates. Silver-based dressings had a limited effect on primary wound pathogens, which were present in 79% of the cultures before, and 71% after, treatment. One silver-resistant Enterobacter cloacae strain was identified (silver nitrate minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) > 512 mg/l, positive for silE, silS and silP). Further studies in vitro showed that inducible silver-resistance was more frequent in Enterobacteriaceae with cephalosporin-resistance and that silver nitrate had mainly a bacteriostatic effect on Staphylococcus aureus. Monitoring of silver resistance should be considered in areas where silver is used extensively.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2011-08-24

How to Cite

Sütterlin, S., Tano, E., Bergsten, A., Tallberg, A.-B., & Melhus, Åsa. (2011). Effects of Silver-based Wound Dressings on the Bacterial Flora in Chronic Leg Ulcers and Its Susceptibility In Vitro to Silver. Acta Dermato-Venereologica, 92(1), 34–39. https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-1170

Issue

Section

Articles