Bacterial biofilms: a review of current research
Bacterial biofilms: a review of current research
Biofilms provide bacterial cells with a protective
environment that allows for survival from antibiotics and host
defense mechanisms. In order to understand how to control
biofilms, it is important to understand the complexity of the
biofilm system. This is in overview of four areas of current
biofilm research: Biofilm resistance to antimicrobials and host
defense mechanisms, the complexity of biofilm structure, the
possible existence of a biofilm phenotype, and the ramifications of
cell cell communication within the biofilm.
De Lancy Pulcini, E., "Bacterial Biofilms: A Review of Current Research," Nephrologie, 22(8):4 (2001).
- Septic arthritis
- Influence of hydrodynamics and cell signaling on the structure and behavior of Pseudomonas aeruginosa biofilms
- Mechanisms of antibiotic resistance in bacterial biofilms
- Development of a laboratory model to assess the removal of biofilm from interproximal spaces by powered tooth brushing
- Experimental osteomyelitis treatment with antibiotic-impregnated hydroxyapatite
- Immunology of staphylococcal biofilm infections in the eye: new tools to study biofilm endophthalmitis
- Mucosal biofilm formation on middle-ear mucosa in the chinchilla model of otitis media
- Osteomyelitis
