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Contact lens care solution killing efficacy against Acanthamoeba castellanii by in vitro testing and live-imaging

Authors :
William Miller
Jan P.G. Bergmanson
Alan R. Burns
Satya Sree N. Kolar
Alison M. McDermott
Joseph C. Manarang
Source :
Contact Lens and Anterior Eye. 38:442-450
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2015.

Abstract

In the past decade there has been an increased incidence of Acanthamoeba keratitis, particularly in contact lens wearers. The aim of this study was to utilize in vitro killing assays and to establish a novel, time-lapse, live-cell imaging methodology to demonstrate the efficacy of contact lens care solutions in eradicating Acanthamoeba castellanii (A. castellanii) trophozoites and cysts. Standard qualitative and quantitative in vitro assays were performed along with novel time-lapse imaging coupled with fluorescent dye staining that signals cell death. Quantitative data obtained demonstrated that 3% non-ophthalmic hydrogen peroxide demonstrated the highest percent killing at 87.4% corresponding to a 4.4 log kill. The other contact lens care solutions which showed a 72.9 to 29.2% killing which was consistent with 4.3-2.8 log reduction in trophozoite viability. Both analytical approaches revealed that polyquaternium/PHMB-based was the least efficacious in terms of trophicidal activity. The cysticidal activity of the solutions was much less than activity against trophozoites and frequently was not detected. Live-imaging provided a novel visual endpoint for characterizing the trophocidal activity of the care solutions. All solutions caused rapid rounding or pseudocyst formation of the trophozoites, reduced motility and the appearance of different morphotypes. Polyquaternium/alexidine-based and peroxide-based lens care system induced the most visible damage indicated by significant accumulation of debris from ruptured cells. Polyquaternium/PHMB-based was the least effective showing rounding of the cells but minimal death. These observations are in keeping with care solution biocides having prominent activity at the plasma membrane of Acanthamoeba.

Details

ISSN :
13670484
Volume :
38
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Contact Lens and Anterior Eye
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4fcb0689b630494083b1a58d614638d6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clae.2015.06.006