muramidase and bendazac-lysine

muramidase has been researched along with bendazac-lysine* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for muramidase and bendazac-lysine

ArticleYear
Accelerated study on lysozyme deposition on poly(HEMA) contact lenses.
    Biomaterials, 1998, Volume: 19, Issue:22

    A technique was developed to accelerate lysozyme deposition on poly(HEMA) contact lenses and measure the amounts of the deposited lysozyme. This technique was for evaluation of bendazac lysine solution, a contact lens cleaning and wetting solution. Effect of temperature on lysozyme deposition on poly(HEMA) contact lenses was examined. Five temperatures ranging from 25 degrees C to 90 degrees C were chosen to examine the temperature effect. The amounts of lysozyme deposited on poly(HEMA) contact lenses at 25 C and 60 C were 0.27 microg/lens and 0.61 microg/lens, respectively. The amount increased sharply to 23 microg/lens at 70 degrees C with the maximum of 31 microg/lens at 90 degrees C. Kinetics of lysozyme deposition on poly(HEMA) contact lenses was examined at 80 degrees C. Lysozyme deposition increased sharply during the first 2 h and reached a plateau after 2 h. Effectiveness of various cleaning procedures was examined using bendazac lysine solution. When the contact lenses were washed without rubbing with fingers, the bendazac lysine reduced the amount of deposited lysozyme by more than 40% from 18.3 microg/lens to 10.6 microg/lens. The effect of bendazac lysine was most prominent when the contact lenses were shaken during storage in the presence of lysozyme in solution. If the contact lenses were cleaned by rubbing with fingers, the effect of bendazac lysine solution on the prevention of lysozyme deposition was negligible.

    Topics: Biocompatible Materials; Contact Lens Solutions; Contact Lenses; Indazoles; Iodine Radioisotopes; Kinetics; Muramidase; Polyhydroxyethyl Methacrylate; Temperature

1998
Use of bendazac lysine to limit protein deposition on soft contact lenses in vitro.
    The CLAO journal : official publication of the Contact Lens Association of Ophthalmologists, Inc, 1991, Volume: 17, Issue:2

    We used the heat denaturation of lysozyme to induce the in vitro formation of protein deposits on 60 poly-HEMA contact lenses (38.6% water). Each lens was individually placed in 20 mL of a 0.04% lysozyme solution. The lenses were divided into two equal groups. In the first group (30 lenses), bendazac lysine (100 mg) was added to the lysozyme solution. The second group of lenses was used as control. Quantitative analysis of protein deposits on the lenses of both groups was carried out by a colorimetric test. In the lenses where deposit formation occurred in the presence of bendazac lysine, a mean protein level of 7.17 +/- 3.42 micrograms per lens was found; in the control group the mean value was 30.6 +/- 8.22 micrograms per lens. Student's t-test showed this difference to be significant (P less than 0.001).

    Topics: Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal; Colorimetry; Contact Lenses, Hydrophilic; Indazoles; Muramidase; Protein Binding

1991