Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"Engineering Approaches for the Detection and Control of Orthopaedic
Biofilm Infections"
05-030 Artificial joints are subject to chronic infections associated with bacterial
biofilms, which only can be eradicated by the traumatic removal of the implant
followed by sustained intravenous antibiotic therapy. We have adopted an
engineering approach to develop electrical-current-based approaches to bacterial
eradication and microelectromechanical systems that could be embedded within the
implanted joint to detect the presence of bacteria and to provide in situ
treatment of the infection before a biofilm can form. In the former case we will
examine the combined bactericidal effects of direct and indirect electrical
fields in combination with antibiotic therapy. In the latter case, bacterial
detection will occur by developing a microelectromechanical-systems-based
biosensor that can "eavesdrop" on bacterial quorum-sensing-based communication
systems. Treatment will be effected by the release of a cocktail of
pharmaceutical reagents contained within integral reservoirs associated with the
implant, including a molecular jamming signal that competitively binds to the
bacteria's quorum sensing receptors (which will "blind" the bacteria, preventing
the production of toxins) and multiple high dose antibiotics to eradicate the
planktonic bacteria. This approach is designed to take advantage of the
relatively high susceptibility to antibiotics that planktonic bacteria display
compared with biofilm envirovars. Here we report the development of a generic
microelectromechanical systems biosensor that measures changes in internal
viscosity in a base fluid triggered by a change in the external environment.
Ehrlich, G.D., P. Stoodley, S. Kathju, Y. Zhao, B. McLeod, N. Balaban, F.Z.
Hu, N.G. Sotereanos, J.W. Costerton, P.S. Stewart, J.C. Post and Q. Lin,
"Engineering Approaches for the Detection and Control of Orthopaedic Biofilm
Infections," Clin. Orthop. Relat. R., 437:59-66 (2005)
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