University of Washington has
developed a method of crafting medical implants
from an antibacterial polymer that could prevent
common infections arising from catheters.
The polymer, that slowly releases an antibiotic
to keep bacteria from establishing a foothold,
could be used to prevent infections around
commonly used devices as catheters as well
as more permanent implants, such as pacemakers.
The technology also offers the advantage of
preventing development of drug-resistant bugs
when some of the bacteria are exposed to an
antibiotic and survive.
Catheters, which are used on patients who
require a long regimen of intravenous drugs,
are initially sterile, but they can become
spots where dangerous micro organisms gather.
Once the bacteria get on the device, they
are extremely difficult to remove and very
resistant to treatment, probably due to a
protective biofilm that bacteria produce after
they become established. When that happens,
often the only way to treat the infection
is to remove the device from the patient.
The key to stopping infections lies in killing
bacteria that come near the device before
they form an attachment.
To accomplish this, researchers first combined
the antibiotic ciprofloxacin with a polymer
called polyethylene glycol - an approved food
additive, and mixed that with the polyurethane
used to make medical implants. That made an
even, homogeneous material capable of releasing
the drug in a uniform manner. To manage the
rate of release, researchers used a plasma
process to coat the material with an ultrathin
layer of another polymer, butyl methacrylate.
When a device is implanted in the body, fluids
pass through that thin, permeable outer coating
and dissolve the polyethylene glycol, which
makes the polyurethane porous. The antibiotic
then leaches out of the polyurethane. The
coating acts as a barrier to the antibiotic,
controlling the rate at which it is released
to the surface of the device. Tests showed
that the system maintains a protective drug
cloak for at least five days.
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