A porcine model for the development and testing of preoperative skin preparations

Update Item Information
Publication Type honors there
School or College College of Science
Department Chemistry
Faculty Mentor Dustin Williams
Creator Godfrey, Rose
Title A porcine model for the development and testing of preoperative skin preparations
Date 2022
Description Clinical preoperative skin preparations (PSPs) do not eradicate skin flora dwelling in the deepest dermal regions. Survivors constitute a persistent infection risk. In search of solutions, we created a porcine model intended for PSP developmental testing. This model employed microbiological techniques sensitive to the deep-dwelling microbial flora as these microorganisms are frequently overlooked when using institutionallyentrenched testing methodologies. Clinical gold-standard PSPs were assessed. Ten Yorkshire pigs were divided into two groups: prepared with either povidone iodine (PVPI) or chlorhexidine gluconate (CHG) PSP. Bioburdens were calculated on square, 4 cm by 4 cm, full-thickness skin samples homogenized in neutralizing media. Endogenous bioburden of porcine skin (3.3 log10 CFU/cm2) was consistent with natural flora numbers in dry human skin. On-label PSP scrub kits with PVP-I (n = 39) or CHG (n = 40) failed the 2-3 log10-reduction criteria established for PSPs by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), resulting in a 1.46 log10 and 0.58 log10 reduction, respectively. Porcine dermal microbiota mirrored that of humans, displaying abundant staphylococcal species. Likewise, histological sections showed similarity in hair follicle depths and sebaceous glands (3.2 ± 0.7 mm). These shared characteristics and the considerable fraction of bacteria which survived clinical PSPs make this model useful for developmental work.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Language eng
Rights Management (c) Rose Godfrey
Format Medium application/pdf
Permissions Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6jzkfjb
ARK ark:/87278/s6zb3w2y
Setname ir_htoa
ID 2019684
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6zb3w2y