1.Evaluation of bactericidal and virucidal activity of novel disinfectant Aaride AGT-1 compared to other commercially available disinfectants against hospital-acquired infections (HAIs)
Jindal, H.M. ; Chandramathi, S. ; Sekaran, S.D. ; Suresh, K.
Tropical Biomedicine 2020;37(No.3):626-636
Hand hygiene is the topmost crucial procedure to prevent hospital-acquired infections. Choosing an effective hand disinfectant is necessary in enforcing good hand hygiene practice especially in hospital settings. The aim of the study was to investigate the efficacy of Aaride AGT-1 as a hand disinfectant for the inhibition of pathogenic microorganisms’ transmission among both patients and personnel in the health care system compared to other commercially available disinfectants. In the present study, a new hand disinfectant Aaride AGT-1 was tested against several bacterial and viral pathogens to evaluate its antimicrobial activity profile. The results revealed that Aaride AGT-1 displayed the highest antibacterial activity against five pathogenic bacteria including MRSA when compared to other commercially available hand sanitizers. Aaride AGT-1 showed the lowest percentage needed to inhibit the growth of bacterial pathogens. In addition, results obtained from time killing assay revealed that Aaride AGT-1 demonstrated the best killing kinetics, by eradicating the bacterial cells rapidly within 0.5 min with 6 log reduction (>99.99% killing). Also, Aaride AGT1 was able to reduce 100% plaque formed by three viruses namely HSV-1, HSV-2 and EV-71. In conclusion, Aaride AGT-1 is capable of killing wide-spectrum of pathogens including bacteria and viruses compared to other common disinfectants used in hospital settings. Aaride AGT-1’s ability to kill both bacteria and viruses contributes as valuable addition to the hand disinfection portfolio.
2.Antibacterial and antibiotic potentiating capabilities of extracts isolated from Burkillanthus malaccensis, Diospyros hasseltii and Cleisthanthus bracteosus against human pathogenic bacteria
Kathirvalu, G. ; Chandramathi, S. ; Azahar, S.A. ; Atiya, N. ; Begum, S. ; Christophe, W. ; Sulaiman, M. ; Abdullah, N. ; Mani, R.R. ; Jindal, H.M. ; Zulkipli, M.
Tropical Biomedicine 2023;40(No.2):152-159
Antibiotics which once a boon in medicine and saved millions of lives are now facing an ever-growing
menace of antibacterial resistance, which desperately needs new antibacterial drugs which are innovative
in chemistry and mode of action. For many years, the world has turned to natural plants with antibacterial
properties to combat antibiotic resistance. On that basis, we aimed to identify plants with antibacterial
and antibiotic potentiating properties. Seventeen different extracts of 3 plants namely Burkillanthus
malaccensis, Diospyros hasseltii and Cleisthanthus bracteosus were tested against multi-drug resistant
Acinetobacter baumannii, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Methicillinresistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA).
Antibacterial activity of hexane, methanol and chloroform extracts of bark, seed, fruit, flesh and leaves
from these plants were tested using, disk diffusion assay, minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) and
minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC) assays. Antibiotic potentiating capabilities were tested using
time-kill assay. B. malaccensis fruit chloroform extract showed the biggest zone of inhibition against MRSA
(13.00±0.0 mm) but C. bracteosus bark methanol extract showed the biggest inhibition zone against
MSSA (15.33±0.6 mm). Interestingly, bark methanol extract of C. bracteosus was active against MRSA
(8.7±0.6 mm), MSSA (7.7±0.6 mm) (Gram-positive) and A. baumannii (7.7±0.6 mm) (Gram-negative).
Overall, the leaf methanol and bark methanol extract of C. bracteosus warrants further investigation
such as compound isolation and mechanism of action for validating its therapeutic use as antibiotic
potentiator importantly against MRSA and A. baumannii.