4.4 Article

Quantifying the relationship between biofilm reduction and thermal tissue damage on metal implants exposed to alternating magnetic fields

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HYPERTHERMIA
Volume 39, Issue 1, Pages 713-724

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02656736.2022.2065038

Keywords

Biofilm; AMF; metal implants; heating; thermal dose

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health [1R44AI155291]

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The study found that intermittent and slow heating can reduce biofilm with less than 3 mm tissue damage around the implant. The results emphasize the importance of uniform implant heating for effective biofilm reduction.
Aim Metal implant infections are a devastating problem due to the formation of biofilm which impairs the effectiveness of antibiotics and leads to surgical replacement as definitive treatment. Biofilm on metal implants can be reduced using heat generated by alternating magnetic fields (AMF). In this study, the relationship between implant surface biofilm reduction and surrounding tissue thermal damage during AMF exposure is investigated through numerical simulations. Methods Mathematical models of biofilm reduction with heat were created based on in vitro experiments. Simulations were performed to predict the spatial and temporal heating on the implant surface and surrounding tissue when exposed to AMF. Results The modeling results show that intermittent and slow heating can achieve biofilm reduction with a narrow zone of tissue damage around an implant of less than 3 mm. The results also emphasize that uniformity of implant heating is an extremely important factor impacting the effectiveness of biofilm reduction. For a knee implant, using a target temperature of 75 degrees C, an intermittent treatment strategy of 15 exposures (10 s to target temperature followed by cooldown) achieved a bacterial CFU reduction of 6-log(10) across 25% of the implant surface with less than 3 mm of tissue damage. Alternatively, a single 60 s heating exposure to same temperature achieved a bacterial reduction of 6-log(10) across 85% of the implant surface, but with 4 mm of tissue damage. Conclusion Overall, this study demonstrates that with uniform heating to temperatures above 70 degrees C, an implant surface can be largely reduced of biofilm, with only a few mm of surrounding tissue damage.

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