Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Preoperative liposomal ozone to reduce eye bacteria in dogs
By Marchegiani, Andrea et al.·Published in Experimental eye research·2019·School of Biosciences and Veterinary Medicine, Italy·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Preoperative topical liposomal ozone dispersion to reduce bacterial colonization in conjunctival sac and periocular skin: Preliminary study in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 22 dogs scheduled for eye surgery had their eyelids and conjunctiva treated with either a new liposomal ozone solution or a common antiseptic called povidone-iodine to see which was better at reducing bacteria. Both treatments significantly lowered the number of bacteria found in the eye area before surgery, while a placebo and another antibiotic did not show the same effectiveness. This suggests that liposomal ozone could be a good option for reducing bacterial load before eye procedures, similar to the traditional povidone-iodine.
People also search for: dog eye surgery prep · reducing bacteria before dog surgery · liposomal ozone for dogs · povidone-iodine eye treatment for dogs
Abstract
Prophylaxis represents a keystone to reduce periocular skin and ocular conjunctiva bacterial load before surgical procedures. Despite many prophylactic agents are available the preferred perioperative ocular surface antimicrobial is still unknown. The purpose of this study was to assess the effectiveness of preoperative liposomal ozone dispersion in reducing bacterial colonization from the conjunctival sac and periocular skin in dogs, in comparison with povidone-iodine and fluoroquinolone. Twenty-two owned dogs consisting with 44 eyes in total scheduled for ophthalmic surgical procedure were enrolled for the study and divided in four groups receiving either ozone dispersion or povidone iodine in eyelid and conjunctiva, fluoroquinolone or placebo. A swab was taken before and after the antisepsis protocol evaluating total microbial count, coagulase positive and negative staphylococci. Statistical analysis revealed a significant decrease in colony forming units (CFU) for total microbial count, coagulase positive and negative staphylococci both for liposomal ozone dispersion and povidone iodine. No statistical differences were detected in median CFU for both one-day placebo and fluoroquinolone preoperative prophylactic topical therapy. The results of this preliminary study demonstrate that liposomal ozone-dispersion is as effective as povidone iodine to reduce preoperative bacterial load in ocular surface.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31634477/