Diffusion of ofloxacin in the endocarditis vegetation assessed with synchrotron radiation UV fluorescence microspectrocopy

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Abstract

The diffusion of antibiotics in endocarditis vegetation bacterial masses has not been described, although it may influence the efficacy of antibiotic therapy in endocarditis. The objective of this work was to assess the diffusion of ofloxacin in experimental endocarditis vegetation bacterial masses using synchrotron-radiation UV fluorescence microspectroscopy. Streptococcal endocarditis was induced in 5 rabbits. Three animals received an unique IV injection of 150 mg/kg ofloxacin, and 2 control rabbits were left untreated. Two fluorescence microscopes were coupled to a synchrotron beam for excitation at 275 nm. A spectral microscope collected fluorescence spectra between 285 and 550 nm. A second, full field microscope was used with bandpass filters at 510-560 nm. Spectra of ofloxacin-treated vegetations presented higher fluorescence between 390 and 540 nm than control. Full field imaging showed that ofloxacin increased fluorescence between 510 and 560 nm. Ofloxacin diffused into vegetation bacterial masses, although it accumulated in their immediate neighborhood. Fluorescence images additionally suggested an ofloxacin concentration gradient between the vegetation peripheral and central areas. In conclusion, ofloxacin diffuses into vegetation bacterial masses, but it accumulates in their immediate neighborhood. Synchrotron radiation UV fluorescence microscopy is a new tool for assessment of antibiotic diffusion in the endocarditis vegetation bacterial masses. © 2011 Batard et al.

Figures

  • Figure 1. Fluorescence of ofloxacin in PBS (dot), ofloxacin in rabbit serum (black solid), and rabbit serum without ofloxacin (gray solid). Ofloxacin concentrations in PBS and serum were respectively 140 and 212 mmom/L (51 and 76 mg/L). Serum had a high intrinsic autofluorescence at 340 nm. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0019440.g001
  • Figure 2. Principal component analysis of control and ofloxacin-treated vegetation spectra. Score plot of first (PC1) and second (PC2) principal components (A). Control (blue +) and ofloxacin-treated (red o) spectra were respectively associated with positive and negative PC2 scores. Correlation loading plot of PC1 and PC2 (B). Correlation of wavelengths with PC1 and PC2 scores are shown for wavelengths ranging from 290 to 540 nm. The outer ellipse and inner ellipse indicate 100% and 50% explained variance respectively. C = control; O = ofloxacin. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0019440.g002
  • Figure 3. Mean spectra of untreated (gray) and ofloxacin (black) treated vegetations. Bold and thin lines represent respectively mean and borders of the 95% confidence interval. Confidence interval border lines may superimpose on mean lines. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0019440.g003
  • Table 1. Fluorescence of control and ofloxacin vegetations.
  • Figure 4. Transmission image (left) and maps of the 390–440 nm peak area (right) of control (A) and ofloxacin treated (B) vegetation maps. The grayscale was the same for both fluorescence maps. White bar = 10 mm. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0019440.g004
  • Figure 5. Fluorescence of control (A) and ofloxacin-treated (B,C,D) vegetation in the 510–560 nm range. Transmission (left) and fluorescence (right) images. The bacterial masses imaged on maps B, C and D located respectively in the intermediate, peripheral and central areas of the tissue specimen. The grayscale was the same for all maps. Fluorescence intensity values (median [range]) for A, B, C and D maps were respectively 2624 [0–14560], 8160 [1168–23376], 6736 [0–34928], and 6128 [432, 14640]. Each ofloxacin map intensity was significantly different from the control map (Mann-Whitney test, p,0.0001 for all). White bar = 10 mm. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0019440.g005
  • Figure 6. Fluorescence inside and next to an ofloxacin-treated bacterial mass. The position of the bacterial mass border was superimposed on the fluorescence map of the 510–560 nm range. For transmission image, see figure 5B. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0019440.g006

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APA

Batard, E., Jamme, F., Villette, S., Jacqueline, C., de la Cochetière, M. F., Caillon, J., & Réfrégiers, M. (2011). Diffusion of ofloxacin in the endocarditis vegetation assessed with synchrotron radiation UV fluorescence microspectrocopy. PLoS ONE, 6(4). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0019440

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