A Model of Infected Burn Wounds Using Escherichia coli O18:K1:H7 for the Study of Gram-Negative Bacteremia and Sepsis
- 1 June 2000
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 68 (6) , 3349-51
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.68.6.3349-3351.2000
Abstract
A difficulty that has emerged in the development and preclinical evaluation of adjuvant therapies for gram-negative sepsis is the lack of easily studied animal models that closely mimic human infection. An objective of this study was to adapt a previously described model of infection in burned mice to rats with a defined bacterial strain of Escherichia coli. Challenge with two colonies of live E. coli O18:K1:H7 bacteria into an 8% full-thickness burn of the dorsal skin surface of rats produced predictable bacteremia at 24 to 48 h and 80 to 100% mortality at 3 to 4 days. E. coli O18:K1:H7 was approximately 10-million-fold more virulent than several other gram-negative bacterial strains. The model should be a useful tool in studying the pathogenicity of burn wound infections and in evaluating the efficacy of novel adjuvant therapies for gram-negative sepsis.Keywords
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