Erschienen in:
09.02.2016 | CORR Insights
CORR Insights®: Biofilm Antimicrobial Susceptibility Increases With Antimicrobial Exposure Time
verfasst von:
Paul Stoodley, PhD
Erschienen in:
Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research®
|
Ausgabe 7/2016
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Excerpt
Biofilm formation by pathogenic bacteria is a recognized virulence factor important in the persistence of chronic infections. When growing as biofilms, even antibiotic sensitive bacteria (as measured by the planktonic broth minimum inhibitory concentration [MIC] and minimum bactericidal concentration [MBC] methods) become highly tolerant of antibiotics. In part, this tolerance is due to the presence of a small fraction (< 1 %) of slow-growing “persister” cells and small colony variants which, according to some, cannot be killed by antibiotics alone, regardless of concentration [
1,
5]. However, this would contradict other studies which report achieve complete sterilization of biofilms as the basis for the Minimum Biofilm Eradication Concentration (MBEC) assay [
2]. …