Active electroceutical treatment of Pseudomonas aeruginosa infected murine wounds

  • Colin R. Mack
  • , Traci A. Wilgus
  • , Sheri Dellos-Nolan
  • , Tony DiCesare
  • , Daria Bentley
  • , Fraser J. Daniel
  • , Vish V. Subramaniam
  • , Sahil Mahajan
  • , Paul Stoodley
  • , Daniel J. Wozniak
  • , Shaurya Prakash

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Chronic, infected dermal wounds have a high burden of cost and remain a persistent hurdle within healthcare. Electroceutical dressings that deliver antimicrobial agents directly to the wound site have emerged as an alternative solution to current standards of care. Here, through a systematic evaluation in an infected murine wound model we report on an actively powered electroceutical dressing that generates hypochlorous acid in situ as an antimicrobial agent to clear infection. In a significant new discovery, we also report that the treatment of these infected wounds with the actively powered electroceutical promotes the closure of wounds better than other test conditions. In a 10-day murine study, mice were wounded, and the dermal injury was infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Four treatment plans were administered to these wounds: no treatment, a commercially available electroceutical dressing, and our electroceutical dressing both powered and unpowered. The mice were subsequently sacrificed 8 days post infection. The powered electroceutical dressing demonstrated significantly reduced bacterial burden compared to untreated wounds. The powered electroceutical dressing also showed the highest wound closure with nearly 60% wound area reduction and approximately 36% percent re-epithelization of the wound bed in contrast to the no-treatment case. When compared against the other treatments, the powered electroceutical dressing demonstrated an improved capability in promoting wound area reduction while lowering infection burden.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere0331785
JournalPLoS ONE
Volume20
Issue number9 September
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2025

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