Abstract
To test whether therapy-resistant corneal infections can be successfully treated with argon cold plasma to reduce or eliminate pathogen microorganisms without affecting corneal cell viability. First-in-human case series and experimental study. Cold plasma effects on viability of primary human corneal limbal epithelial cells were studied using exposure times from 0.5 to 10minutes (metabolic activity, oxidative stress, apoptosis). Disinfective potential of cold plasma was tested against common pathogens (Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Candida albicans) on culture medium and evaluated by counting colony-forming units and optical density measurements, as well as against S aureus in a human cornea infection model. Additionally, in a first-in-human trial 4 patients with therapy-resistant corneal ulcers were treated to evaluate the clinical potential of cold plasma. Cells treated for 0.5-5minutes completely recovered within 24 hours without changes in morphology; only 10-minute treatment impaired the cells permanently. No evident oxidative stress, apoptosis, or damage to the corneal structure could be found. All pathogens were susceptible to cold plasma treatments, with different levels of sensitivity. The condition of all 4 patients significantly improved after cold plasma treatment combined with antibiotic therapy. Our results indicate that argon cold plasma treatment reduces or eliminates common pathogens without impairing corneal epithelial cells invitro, exvivo, and in direct application on patients' eyes. We conclude that argon cold plasma therapy offers a potential supplement or alternative therapy for therapy-resistant corneal infections. A larger, comparative study is necessary to further confirm these findings.
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