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ANTI-BACTERIAL SILVER COATINGS ON ORTHOPAEDIC METALS – AN IN VITRO AND ANIMAL STUDY



Abstract

Metallic implants are used frequently in the operative repair of joints and fractures in orthopaedic surgery. Orthopaedic implant infection is chronic and biofilm based. Present treatment focuses on removing the infective substratum and implant surgically as well as prolonged anti-microbial therapy. Biofilms are up to 500 times more resistant than planktonic strains of bacterial flora to antibiotics. Silver coatings on polymers and nylon (catheters, heart valve cuffs, burn dressings) have shown inhibition of this biofilm formation in its adhesion stage. Our aim was to deposit effective, minute, antibacterial layers of silver on orthopaedic stainless steel and titanium K-wires and to investigate the effect of these coatings when exposed to Staphylococcus Aureus biofilms in an in vitro and in vivo environment.

Combining magnetron sputtering with a neutral atom beam (Saddle Field) plasma source at 10−4 mbar in argon gas at temperatures of 60°C, a silver coating of 99.9% purity was deposited onto stainless steel and titanium orthopaedic K-wires. Coating thickness measurements were obtained using glancing angle x-ray diffraction of glass slides coated adjacent to wires. Magnetron parameters were modified to produce varying thickness of silver. Adhesiveness was examined using Rockwell punch tests. Silver leaching experiments were carried out in phosphate buffered saline at 37°C for 48 hours and using inductive coupled plasma spectrometry to assess leached silver ions. Surface microscopy visualised physical changes in the coatings.

Biofilm adhesion was determined by exposing wires to Staphylococcus Aureus ATCC 29213 – NCTC 12973 for 15 minutes to allow biofilm initiation and adhesion. Wires were then culturing for 24 hours at 37°C in RPMI. Subsequently, wires were sonicated at 50Hz in ringer’s solution and gently vortexed to dislodge biofilm. Sonicate was plated out by log dilution method on Columbia blood agar plates. Bacterial colonies were then counted and changes expressed in log factors.

K-wires were coated with 1 to 50 nm of silver by running the magnetron sputtering at low currents. These coatings showed excellent adhesive properties within the 48 hours exposed with only 3.7% of silver leaching in buffered saline. The silver coated stainless steel wires showed a log 2.31 fold reduction in biofilm formation as compared to control wires (p< .001), Student t-test), the silver coated titanium wires showed a log reduction of 2.06, (p< .001, Student t-test). Animal studies demonstrated enormous difficulty in reproducing biofilm formation and showed a 0.49 log fold reduction in the titanium group when exposed to Staph Aureus (p< .01, Student t-test), the other groups showed no statistically significant reduction.

We have perfected a method of depositing tiny layers of anti-bacterial silver onto stainless steel and titanium, which is anti-infective in vitro but not in vivo. Further studies involving other metal coatings such as platinum and copper are warranted.

The abstracts were prepared by Mr Ray Moran. Correspondence should be addressed to him at Irish Orthopaedic Associaton, Secretariat, c/o Cappagh National Orthopaedic Hospital, Finglas, Dublin 11.