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Antifungal Resistance of Candidal Biofilms Formed on Denture Acrylic in vitro

591

Citations

18

References

2001

Year

TLDR

Denture biofilms serve as a protective reservoir for oral microbes. The study aims to develop a reliable model to investigate Candida biology within these biofilms. A reproducible C. albicans denture biofilm model was established and used to test susceptibility of two clinical isolates to four antifungals.

Abstract

Denture biofilms represent a protective reservoir for oral microbes. The study of the biology of Candida in these biofilms requires a reliable model. A reproducible model of C. albicans denture biofilm was developed and used to determine the susceptibility of two clinically relevant C. albicans isolates against 4 antifungals. C. albicans, growing as a biofilm, exhibited resistance to amphotericin B, nystatin, chlorhexidine, and fluconazole, with 50% reduction in metabolic activity (50% RMA) at concentrations of 8, 16, 128, and > 64 μg/mL, respectively. In contrast, planktonically cultured C. albicans were susceptible (50% RMA for the same antifungals was obtained at 0.25, 1.0, 4.0, and 0.5 μg/mL, respectively). In conclusion, results obtained by means of our biofilm model show that biofilm-associated C. albicans cells, compared with cells grown in planktonic form, are resistant to antifungals used to treat denture stomatitis.

References

YearCitations

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