Biofilms To Blame for Chronic Ear InfectionsDrug-resistant communities of bacteria pose a challenge for treatment.
Middle-ear infections, the most common reason that children visit doctors, are usually cleared up with antibiotics. But occasionally they persist and become a chronic illness that only a surgical procedure can fix. A recent study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association shows that tight-knit communities of bacteria called biofilms are the culprit of this chronic form of ear infections.
In fact, biofilms, which are resistant to many conventional antibiotics, are being implicated in several chronic infections. And while some researchers have been skeptical that biofilms cause chronic ear infections, researchers at the Allegheny-Singer Research Institute in Pittsburgh, led by Garth Ehrlich and Christopher Post, have been building evidence in animals over the past few years that biofilms are behind these intractable infections. Their new study provides direct evidence in children that biofilms are present. Ehrlich says that both the temporary and chronic ear infections are caused by the same bacteria -- yet only in some cases do the bacteria form a biofilm. "They build a little house for themselves," Ehrlich explains. Biofilms are made of a sticky, nonliving matrix that surrounds the bacteria. Sequestered inside these structures, the bacteria settle into a largely inactive state. Penicillin and other antibiotics are ineffective against these dormant bacteria because the drugs work by interfering with activities like reproduction. "If the process isn't going on, you can't disturb the process," Ehrlich says. Joseph Kerschner, an otolaryngologist at the Medical College of Wisconsin and co-author of the study, says that the findings are particularly relevant for children who get recurrent middle-ear infections that seem to go away with treatment and then return. "These kids that are chronically getting infected -- maybe it isn't new infections every time," he says. Instead, a persistent biofilm may be to blame. Biofilms have already been linked to chronic inflammation and infections in the prostate, teeth and gums, tonsils, bladder, bone, and lungs, as well as the middle ear. And several companies are working on developing new materials and surface coatings that disrupt the ability of bacteria to attach to implantable medical devices or drugs that interfere with biofilms in chronic infections. Australia's Biosignal has been developing anti-biofilm compounds based on chemicals excreted by a type of seaweed. Sequoia Sciences in San Diego, CA, is also focusing on identifying compounds in plants that keep biofilms from forming. And NovaCal Pharmaceuticals in Emeryville, CA, is using bleach-like chemicals, naturally produced by white blood cells of the immune system, to disrupt biofilms.
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A Hope for Hearing Loss
06/21/2006










Comments
I think that the basic substance of the biofilm must lend itself to disolution thus unbinding the rascals and freeing them for annihilation.
Seems you need to find the right surfactant.
How about dishwashing liquid that would start to break the surface tension and go on to dissolve the binding. How about a direct sterile injection into the infected area, like a flood that you keep "topped up" for a couple of days to complete the task.
What about recurrence?/ That is the big problem.
07/14/2006
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When I had mid-ear infection as a child, my granny warmed up a tea spoon of cooking oil (!), poured it in me ear and plugged with cotton. I was always OK the next day.
07/20/2006
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