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Antimicrobial activities of silver dressings: an in vitro comparison.

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TLDR
Understanding the characteristics of silver-coated or -impregnated dressings may enable them to be targeted more appropriately according to the specific requirements for use of a particular dressing, as in for prophylaxis in skin grafting or for an infected wound with MRSA.
Abstract
A range of silver-coated or -impregnated dressings are now commercially available for use but comparative data on their antimicrobial efficacies are limited. The antibacterial activities of five commercially available silver-coated/impregnated dressings were compared against nine common burn-wound pathogens, namely methicillin-sensitive and -resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), Enterococcus faecalis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Escherichia coli, Enterobacter cloacae, Proteus vulgaris, Acinetobacter baumannii and a multi-drug-efflux-positive Acinetobacter baumannii (BM4454), using a broth culture method. The rapidity and extent of killing of these pathogens under in vitro conditions were evaluated. All five silver-impregnated dressings investigated exerted bactericidal activity, particularly against Gram-negative bacteria, including Enterobacter species, Proteus species and E. coli. The spectrum and rapidity of action, however, ranged widely for different dressings. Acticoat and Contreet had a broad spectrum of bactericidal activities against both Gram-positive and -negative bacteria. Contreet was characterized by a very rapid bactericidal action and achieved a reduction of > or =10,000 c.f.u. ml(-1) in the first 30 min for Enterobacter cloacae, Proteus vulgaris, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Acinetobacter baumanii. Other dressings demonstrated a narrower range of bactericidal activities. Understanding the characteristics of these dressings may enable them to be targeted more appropriately according to the specific requirements for use of a particular dressing, as in for prophylaxis in skin grafting or for an infected wound with MRSA.

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Green synthesis of silver nanoparticles from Euphorbia and its biological activities

TL;DR: The utilisation of several extracts from different Euphorbia plant species for the green production of silver nanoparticles is discussed here, and different phytochemicals involved in the nanoparticles’ synthetic mechanism and phytoconstituents that act as stabilising, capping agents during nanoparticle production are described.

Biological synthesis and validation of silver nano particles from roots of svensonia hyderobadensis (walp.) mold - a rare medicinal plant taxon

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Silver nanoparticles fabrication using marine plant (mayaca fluviatilis) resources

TL;DR: In this paper, the synthesis of highly dispersed nanoparticles using a marine plant extract (Mayaca fluviatilis) extract as the reducing agent was reported, which showed that there is no correlation always between the colour development and the increase in absorbance exhibited by the nanometal synthesised.
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Eco-friendly phyto-synthesis of silver nanoparticles using colchicum autumnale and its characterization.

TL;DR: Panzade as mentioned in this paper reported biogenic fabrication of silver nanoparticles by a simple procedure using leaf broth of Colchicum autumnale without extra surfactant, capping agent, and/or template at ambient conditions.
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The Expression of Antimicrobial Peptide Lysozyme is Increased by Treatment with Silver Nanoparticle (Atomyball S®) in Mammalian Epithelial Cells

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of nanoparticles on mammalian innate immune molecules that possess bacterial killing capacity was investigated and it was shown that nanoparticles positively regulated the expression of antimicrobial peptide lysozyme in mammalian cells.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Bacterial silver resistance: molecular biology and uses and misuses of silver compounds

TL;DR: Resistance to silver compounds as determined by bacterial plasmids and genes has been defined by molecular genetics and the use of molecular epidemiological tools will establish the range and diversity of such resistance systems in clinical and non-clinical sources.
Journal ArticleDOI

Silver-based crystalline nanoparticles, microbially fabricated

TL;DR: Transmission electron microscopy, quantitative energy-dispersive x-ray analysis, and electron diffraction established that the crystals comprise at least three different types, found both in whole cells and thin sections, in Pseudomonas stutzeri AG259.
Journal ArticleDOI

Silver nanoparticles and polymeric medical devices: a new approach to prevention of infection?

TL;DR: A completely new approach using supercritical carbon dioxide to impregnate silicone with nanoparticulate silver metal allows for the first time silver impregnation of medical polymers and promises to lead to an antimicrobial biomaterial whose activity is not restricted by increasing antibiotic resistance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Silver. I: Its antibacterial properties and mechanism of action.

TL;DR: The main mechanism of action of silver products, which are broad-spectrum antibiotics and are not yet associated with drug resistance, is described.
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