Biopierces: drug-eluting ear tags for infection prevention in animal tagging
Christopher Cartmell, Emad Naseri, Russell G. Kerr, Daniel Hurnik, Chelsea Martin, Ali Ahmadi

TL;DR
This study shows that drug-eluting ear tags (Biopierces) reduce bacterial infections and support healing in livestock by releasing chlorhexidine at the tagging site.
Contribution
The novelty lies in developing and testing drug-eluting ear tags with chlorhexidine for infection prevention in livestock tagging.
Findings
Biopierces reduced heavy bacterial contamination by half compared to controls in vivo.
In vitro, Biopierces released ~75% of chlorhexidine within 2 hours and showed strong antimicrobial activity.
Biopierces showed trends toward improved healing, with increased epithelialization and reduced swelling.
Abstract
Ear tagging is a routine practice in livestock management, but it can be associated with bacterial colonization and infection at puncture sites. This study evaluated drug-eluting ear tags (Biopierce), incorporating chlorhexidine (CHX) in a poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) matrix, due to their ability to reduce microbial burden and support wound healing. Biopierce eartags were fabricated by coating commercial ear tags with CHX–PLGA and compared to untreated controls. In vitro, Biopierces demonstrated a rapid burst release of CHX (~75% within 2 h), plateauing by 8 h, with eluates showing strong antimicrobial activity against Staphylococcus aureus in disk and tag diffusion assays. In vivo, five adult commercial boars each received one Biopierce and one control tag, with bacterial colonization assessed at 3, 7, 14, and 28 days using MALDI-TOF identification and semi-quantitative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrthopedic Infections and Treatments · Surgical Sutures and Adhesives · Surgical site infection prevention
