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Synergistic Antibacterial Effects of Metallic Nanoparticle Combinations
Authors
A Azam
AK Chatterjee
+39 more
AM Allahverdiyev
C Pellieux
F Furno
F Ghasemi
F Mirzajani
G Grass
H Bahadar
HF Chambers
I Sondi
J Liu
JA Garza-Cervantes
JR Moronoes
JS Kim
K Punjabi
K Soo-Hwan
L Wang
MA Syed
MJ Hajipour
NA Amro
OV Salata
PD Lister
RK Matharu
RM Izatt
RM Richards
S Brown
S Pal
S Prabhu
S Ramírez-Estrada
S Shaikh
SM Dizaj
SM Stocks
TA Brown
TC Dakal
W Jiang
WH Jong
XH Wu
Y Hsueh
Y Xie
YK Cheong
Publication date
5 November 2019
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
© The Author(s) 2019.Metallic nanoparticles have unique antimicrobial properties that make them suitable for use within medical and pharmaceutical devices to prevent the spread of infection in healthcare. The use of nanoparticles in healthcare is on the increase with silver being used in many devices. However, not all metallic nanoparticles can target and kill all disease-causing bacteria. To overcome this, a combination of several different metallic nanoparticles were used in this study to compare effects of multiple metallic nanoparticles when in combination than when used singly, as single elemental nanoparticles (SENPs), against two common hospital acquired pathogens (Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas. aeruginosa). Flow cytometry LIVE/DEAD assay was used to determine rates of cell death within a bacterial population when exposed to the nanoparticles. Results were analysed using linear models to compare effectiveness of three different metallic nanoparticles, tungsten carbide (WC), silver (Ag) and copper (Cu), in combination and separately. Results show that when the nanoparticles are placed in combination (NPCs), antimicrobial effects significantly increase than when compared with SENPs (P < 0.01). This study demonstrates that certain metallic nanoparticles can be used in combination to improve the antimicrobial efficiency in destroying morphologically distinct pathogens within the healthcare and pharmaceutical industry.Peer reviewe
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UCL Discovery
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Last time updated on 26/05/2020
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University of Hertfordshire Research Archive
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