OPTI-FREE Express and OPTI-FREE RepleniSH multipurpose disinfecting solutions maintained fungicidal efficacy after storage of lenses. The Alexidine- and PHMB-based multipurpose solutions tested showed significant uptake of preservative into group IV lenses, resulting in a decrease in the residual activity of the storage solution. The POLYQUAD systems showed a low uptake of biocide and maintained fungicidal efficacy against F. solani.
The wetting and soaking solutions and contact lens cases of eye clinic patients commonly were contaminated with gram-negative bacteria during their use. Serratia marcescens occurred most frequently in preserved solutions, whereas Pseudomonas aeruginosa was most often recovered from home-prepared saline. The bacteria were recovered at densities of greater than 10(6) cells per ml and typically persisted in the solutions. Eight patients who developed bacterial keratitis during 1986 used solutions contaminated with the etiological agents of the infections. Improper hygienic practices of the patients and failure of some preservative systems were implicated in the development of the infections.
Pregnant female mice, after intravaginal inoculation with Herpesvirus hominis (HVH) type 2, developed vaginitis on days 5 to 7 after virus challenge, followed by hunching and hind limb paralysis on days 7 to 9 and death from encephalitis on days 9 to 11. After initial replication in the mucous membranes of the genital tract, virus spread to the spinal cord and ascended to involve the brain. Viremia or replication of H. hominis type 2 in the liver or spleen was not detected. Virus was cleared from vaginal secretions by days 8 to 10 after infection. Pregnant mice were more susceptible to the infection than nonpregnant mice. This experimental infection in female mice provides a model for genital herpesvirus infection and for herpesvirus encephalitis in which one can evaluate potentially promising antiviral chemotherapeutic agents.
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