Author: Kanagalingam, J.; Feliciano, R.; Hah, J. H.; Labib, H.; Le, T. A.; Lin, J.â€C.
Title: Practical use of povidoneâ€iodine antiseptic in the maintenance of oral health and in the prevention and treatment of common oropharyngeal infections Cord-id: jiblk5qp Document date: 2015_8_6
ID: jiblk5qp
Snippet: AIMS: To better inform medical practitioners on the role of antiseptics in oropharyngeal health and disease, this article focuses on povidoneâ€iodine (PVPâ€I), an established and widelyâ€available antiseptic agent. METHODOLOGY: Review of the antiâ€infective profile, efficacy and safety of PVPâ€I in managing common upper respiratory tract infections such as the common cold, influenza and tonsilloâ€pharyngitis, as well as oral complications resulting from cancer treatment (oral mucositis), a
Document: AIMS: To better inform medical practitioners on the role of antiseptics in oropharyngeal health and disease, this article focuses on povidoneâ€iodine (PVPâ€I), an established and widelyâ€available antiseptic agent. METHODOLOGY: Review of the antiâ€infective profile, efficacy and safety of PVPâ€I in managing common upper respiratory tract infections such as the common cold, influenza and tonsilloâ€pharyngitis, as well as oral complications resulting from cancer treatment (oral mucositis), and dental conditions (periodontitis, caries). RESULTS: Antiseptics with broadâ€spectrum antiâ€infective activity and low resistance potential offer an attractive option in both infection control and prevention. While there is some evidence of benefit of antiseptics in a variety of clinical settings that include dental and oral hygiene, dermatology, oncology, and pulmonology, there appears to be discordance between the evidenceâ€base and practice. This is especially apparent in the management and prevention of oropharyngeal infections, for which the use of antiseptics varies considerably between clinical practices, and is in marked contrast to their dermal application, where they are extensively used as both a prophylaxis and a treatment of skin and wound infections, thus minimising the use of antibiotics. CONCLUSION: The link between oral and oropharyngeal health status and susceptibility to infection has long been recognised. The high rates of antibiotic misuse and subsequent development of bacterial resistance (e.g. increasing vancomycinâ€resistant enterococci (VRE) and methicillinâ€resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA)) in large parts of the world, especially across Asia Pacific, highlight the need for identifying alternative antimicrobials that would minimise the use of these medications. This, together with recent largeâ€scale outbreaks of, for example, avian and swine influenza virus, further underline the importance of an increasing armamentarium for infection prevention and control.
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