PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

The Antibacterial Activity of Acetic Acid against Biofilm-Producing Pathogens of Relevance to Burns Patients.

  • Fenella D Halstead,
  • Maryam Rauf,
  • Naiem S Moiemen,
  • Amy Bamford,
  • Christopher M Wearn,
  • Adam P Fraise,
  • Peter A Lund,
  • Beryl A Oppenheim,
  • Mark A Webber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0136190
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. e0136190

Abstract

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IntroductionLocalised infections, and burn wound sepsis are key concerns in the treatment of burns patients, and prevention of colonisation largely relies on biocides. Acetic acid has been shown to have good antibacterial activity against various planktonic organisms, however data is limited on efficacy, and few studies have been performed on biofilms.ObjectivesWe sought to investigate the antibacterial activity of acetic acid against important burn wound colonising organisms growing planktonically and as biofilms.MethodsLaboratory experiments were performed to test the ability of acetic acid to inhibit growth of pathogens, inhibit the formation of biofilms, and eradicate pre-formed biofilms.ResultsTwenty-nine isolates of common wound-infecting pathogens were tested. Acetic acid was antibacterial against planktonic growth, with an minimum inhibitory concentration of 0.16-0.31% for all isolates, and was also able to prevent formation of biofilms (at 0.31%). Eradication of mature biofilms was observed for all isolates after three hours of exposure.ConclusionsThis study provides evidence that acetic acid can inhibit growth of key burn wound pathogens when used at very dilute concentrations. Owing to current concerns of the reducing efficacy of systemic antibiotics, this novel biocide application offers great promise as a cheap and effective measure to treat infections in burns patients.