In critically colonised wounds, many of the signs of infection are often absent, and delayed healing may be the only clinical sign. The prevention of critical colonisation is important, but its pathophysiology has not yet been elucidated. We have previously reported that dysbiotic microbiota dissimilar to the peri-wound skin microbiota may develop in critically colonised wounds. To investigate the role of dysbiotic microbiota, this study aimed to develop a critically colonised wound model by transplantation of dysbiotic microbiota. To transplant microbiota, a bacterial solution (dysbiosis group) or with Luria-Bertani medium (commensal group) was inoculated to full-thickness wounds of rats. The bacterial solution was prepared by anaerobically culturing bacteria from donor rats on an artificial dermis in Luria-Bertani medium for 72 hours. As a result, the degree of the change in the microbial similarity between pre- and post-transplantation of microbiota was significantly higher in the dysbiosis group (P
CITATION STYLE
Kunimitsu, M., Nakagami, G., Minematsu, T., Koudounas, S., & Sanada, H. (2023). An in vivo critically colonised wound model with dysbiotic wound microbiota. International Wound Journal, 20(3), 648–658. https://doi.org/10.1111/iwj.13906
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