acriflavine and Wounds--Penetrating

acriflavine has been researched along with Wounds--Penetrating* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for acriflavine and Wounds--Penetrating

ArticleYear
In defence of 'dye therapy'.
    International journal of antimicrobial agents, 2014, Volume: 44, Issue:1

    Worldwide, healthcare is facing enormous problems with the continuing rise of drug-resistant infectious diseases. In view of the scarcity of new antimicrobial agents and the withdrawal of many pharmaceutical houses from the fray, alternative approaches are required. One of these is photoantimicrobial chemotherapy, which is highly effective across the range of microbial pathogens and does not suffer from resistance. However, there is a lack of uptake of this approach by healthcare providers and the pharmaceutical industry alike. It is seldom recalled that, unlike anticancer photodynamic therapy, the development of photoantimicrobial agents has evolved from the antiseptic 'dye therapy' in common use until the widespread introduction of the penicillin class in the mid-1940s. Cationic biological dyes such as methylene blue, crystal violet and acriflavine were effective in local wound therapy and today provide a sound basis for light-activated antimicrobial therapeutics. It is proposed that such 'safe' dyes are introduced as locally administered photoantimicrobials, especially in order to conserve valuable conventional antibacterial drugs.

    Topics: Acriflavine; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Coloring Agents; Gentian Violet; Gram-Negative Bacteria; Gram-Negative Bacterial Infections; Gram-Positive Bacteria; Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections; Humans; Methylene Blue; Otorhinolaryngologic Diseases; Photosensitizing Agents; Wound Healing; Wounds, Penetrating

2014