Silver in Health Care: Antimicrobial Effects and Safety in Use
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Abstract
Silver has a long and intriguing history as an antibiotic in human health care. It has been developed for use in water purification, wound care, bone prostheses, reconstructive orthopaedic surgery, cardiac devices, catheters and surgical appliances. Advancing biotechnology has enabled incorporation of ionizable silver into fabrics for clinical use to reduce the risk of nosocomial infections and for personal hygiene. The antimicrobial action of silver or silver compounds is proportional to the bioactive silver ion (Ag(+)) released and its availability to interact with bacterial or fungal cell membranes. Silver metal and inorganic silver compounds ionize in the presence of water, body fluids or tissue exudates.…
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803
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- 99.62
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- 100%
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Silver nanoparticle
- Antimicrobial
- Silver salts
- Membrane
- Ingestion
- Chemistry
- Medicine
- Biochemistry
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Clean water and sanitation
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