Abstract

One hundred clinical isolates of Pseudomonas aeruginosa were collected from 22 medical centers throughout Europe and were challenged with two aminoglycoside-loaded bone cements, employing a modified in vitro Kirby-Bauer susceptibility model. The results of this study show that Simplex P with tobramycin exhibits antibacterial activity against 98% of the strains tested, compared to 93% for Palacos with gentamicin. Additionally, for strains that were susceptible to the antibiotic bone cement formulations, the average zone of inhibition produced around the tobramycin-loaded cement disks was approximately 25% greater than that seen around the gentamicin-loaded cement disks. This difference was statistically significant (p << 0.01). Tobramycin-loaded bone cement is therefore the preferred formulation when addressing Pseudomonas aeruginosa in septic joint arthroplasty.

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