Enrichment of Bone Tissue with Antibacterially Effective Amounts of Nitric Oxide Derivatives by Treatment with Dielectric Barrier Discharge Plasmas Optimized for Nitrogen Oxide Chemistry

Biomedicines. 2023 Jan 17;11(2):244. doi: 10.3390/biomedicines11020244.

Abstract

Cold atmospheric plasmas (CAPs) generated by dielectric barrier discharge (DBD), particularly those containing higher amounts of nitric oxide (NO) or NO derivates (NOD), are attracting increasing interest in medical fields. In the present study, we, for the first time, evaluated DBD-CAP-induced NOD accumulation and therapeutically relevant NO release in calcified bone tissue. This knowledge is of great importance for the development of new therapies against bacterial-infectious complications during bone healing, such as osteitis or osteomyelitis. We found that by modulating the power dissipation in the discharge, it is possible (1) to significantly increase the uptake of NODs in bone tissue, even into deeper regions, (2) to significantly decrease the pH in CAP-exposed bone tissue, (3) to induce a long-lasting and modulable NO production in the bone samples as well as (4) to significantly protect the treated bone tissue against bacterial contaminations, and to induce a strong bactericidal effect in bacterially infected bone samples. Our results strongly suggest that the current DBD technology opens up effective NO-based therapy options in the treatment of local bacterial infections of the bone tissue through the possibility of a targeted modulation of the NOD content in the generated CAPs.

Keywords: cold atmospheric plasma (CAP); dielectric barrier discharge (DBD); nitric oxide radical (NO).

Grants and funding

This work was supported by the Faculty of Medicine of the Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf.