Novel anti-microbial systems containing the magnesium sulfate adduct of 2,2'-dithiobis-pyridine-1,1'-dioxide and a water soluble zinc salt

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • RE33512
  • Patent Number
    RE33,512
  • Date Filed
    Friday, December 23, 1988
    35 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, January 1, 1991
    33 years ago
Abstract
This invention relates to novel antimicrobial systems containing a water-soluble, non-ionic pyrethione derivative known chemically as the magnesium sulfate adduct of 2,2'-dithiobis-pyridine-1,1'-dioxide (referred to hereinafter as "the magnesium sulfate adduct") and a water soluble zinc salt.The antimicrobial systems of this invention may be incorporated in various useful therapeutic and cleansing compositions such, for example, as surgical scrub compositions, skin disinfectants, mouthwashes, deodorants, hospital cleaners, etc.
Description

SUMMARY OF INVENTION
This invention relates to novel antimicrobial systems containing a water-soluble, non-ionic pyrethione derivative known chemically as the magnesium sulfate adduct of 2,2'-dithiobis-pyridine-1,1'-dioxide (referred to hereinafter as "the magnesium sulfate adduct") and a water soluble zinc salt. More particularly, it has been found that the presence of a water soluble zinc salt appears to enhance to an unexpected extent the antimicrobial activity of the magnesium sulfate adduct against certain types of microorganisms such, for example, as .[.Staphylococcus epidermidis, Staphylococcus aureus and.]. Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
The antimicrobial system of this invention may be incorporated in various useful therapeutic and cleansing compositions such, for example, as surgical scrub compositions, skin disinfectants, mouthwashes, deodorants, hospital cleaners, etc.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The magnesium sulfate adduct used in accordance with this invention is a well known broad spectrum antimicrobial agent. For example, a well known commercially available form is sold by Olin Chemicals of Stanford, Conn. under the trade name "OMADINE MDS" which is the trihydrate form.
While the magnesium sulfate adduct used in this invention has broad spectrum antimicrobial activity, it lacks the desired activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa, the microorganism associated with infection that often follows severe burning of the skin.
.[.Examples of additional microorganisms against which it would be desirable to enhance the antimicrobial activity of the pyrithione derivative used in this invention are Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis..].
OBJECTS OF THE INVENTION
An object of the invention is to provide novel antimicrobial systems wherein enhanced antimicrobial activity of the magnesium sulfate adduct is effectuated against certain types of microorganisms.
Another object of this invention is to provide novel therapeutic and cleansing compositions having incorporated therein the antimicrobial system set forth in the foregoing object.





GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
It has been found that the objects of this invention may be realized by forming an antimicrobial system containing the magnesium sulfate adduct and a water soluble salt.
For example, microbiological testing indicates that the activity of magnesium sulfate adduct against Ps. aeruginosa is enhanced in the presence of water soluble zinc salts.
The preferred zinc salt used in accordance with this invention is zinc chloride (ZnCl.sub.2). Other water soluble zinc salts which may be used are zinc acetate, zinc sulfate, zinc nitrate, zinc phenylsulfonate, etc.
In general, it has been found that in order to obtain the desired enhancement of antimicrobial activity in accordance with the present invention the zinc salt should be in an amount from about 1 to about 10, and preferably from about 1 to 1 parts by weight per part of the magnesium sulfate adduct.
In the therapeutic and/or cleansing composition of this invention the magnesium sulfate adduct in general is in an amount from about 0.1 to 1.5% by weight and the zinc salt from about 0.1 to 1% by weight, of the total composition.
It has been found that a most useful antimicrobial composition that may be obtained utilizing the present invention is a surgical scrub compositions employing the antimicrobial system of this invention in an anhydrous foamable base composition. Such surgical scrub compositions have been found useful in killing .[.both Staphylococcus aureus and.]. .Iadd.the .Iaddend.Pseudomonas aeruginosa .[.types of bacteria.]..Iadd.bacterium.Iaddend.. The anhydrous foamable base composition contains petroleum jelly, mineral oil and a mild detergent (Sodium cocoyl isethionate).
SPECIFIC DESCRIPTION OF THE PRESENT INVENTION
In order to illustrate the invention by specific examples a number of compositions containing the magnesium sulfate adduct and zinc chloride in accordance with the invention were tested for antimicrobial activity and compared with control compositions containing either the magnesium sulfate adduct and/or zinc chloride. These compositions are disclosed in Table I and their antimicrobial activity determined using the "Zone of Inhibition Test" determined.
Zone of inhibition test is the relationship between a standard application of a test formulation on a solid agar surface and the resulting zone of inhibited growth of a test organism applied to the agar surface. The larger the zone of growth inhibition, the greater the antimicrobial activity. This test method is used to determine antimicrobial activity in both liquids and solids.
The compositions of Table I which exemplify of the present invention are:
TABLE I______________________________________SYNERGISTIC EFFECTS OF ZnCl.sub.2 ONTHE ACTIVITY OF THE MAGNESIUMSULFATE ADDUCT .RTM. vs. PSEUDOMONAS PHYSI- ZONES (mm)ACTIVE ING.'S CAL vs. PSEUDO-AND PERCENTAGE FORM MONAS______________________________________Example Omadine MDS @ 0.135% Solution 0Example Aluminum Chlorohydrate Solution 0B (ACH) @ 17.5%Example Omadine MDS @ 0.135% Solution 0C ACH @ 17.5%Example Omadine MDS @ 0.135% Solution 7.61 (ACH) @ 17.5% ZnCl.sub.2 @ 0.1%Example ZnCl.sub.2 @ 0.1% Lotion 0DExample Omadine MDS @ 0.135% Solution 0E ACH @ 17.5%Example Omadine MDS @ 0.135% Solution 8.62 ACH @ 17.5% ZnCl.sub.2 @ 0.1%Example Omadine MDS @ 0.135% Solution 0FExample Omadine MDS @ 0.135% Solution 5.63 ZnCl.sub.2 @ 0.10%Example ZnCl.sub.2 @ 0.10% Solution 0GExample Omadine MDS @ 0.135% Solution 0HExample Omadine MDS @ 0.135% Solution 0I ACH @ 17.5%Example Omadine MDS @ 0.135% Solution 8.34 ACH @ 17.5% ZnCl.sub.2 @ 0.10%Example Base Formula Only Lotion 0JExample ZnCl.sub.2 1.0% Lotion 2.9KExample Omadine MDS 0.225% Lotion 1.9LExample Omadine MDS 0.225% Lotion 11.95 ZnCl.sub.2 1.0%Example ZnCl.sub.2 2.0% Solution 1MExample Omadine MDS 0.225 Solution 0.5NExample Omadine MD @ 0.5% Powder 11.36 ZnCl.sub.2 2.0%______________________________________ *The magnesium sulfate adduct is sold by Olin Chemicals under the trade name OMADINE MDS.
Another useful determination for evaluating antimicrobial activity is to the minimal inhibitory concentration (M.I.C.) amount. The minimal inhibitory concentration is a serial twofold dilution of the test formulation in a broth culture medium which is innoculated with a standardized culture of microorganisms. The amount of test agent that will inhibit visible microbial growth is termed the minimal inhibitory concentration (M.I.C.) level. The lower the amount of test agent, the gretaer the antimicrobial activity.
.[.In Table 2 there is reported minimal inhibitory concentration values for Example 7 formed in accordance with the present invention and controls containing only the magnesium sulfate adduct and/or zinc chloride..].
TABLE 2__________________________________________________________________________FORMULA ACTIVE ING.'S PHYSICAL MIMINUM INHIBITORY CONCENTRATIONNOS. AND PERCENTAGE FORM (PPM) vs. PSEUDOMONAS__________________________________________________________________________Example O ZnCl.sub.2 0.1% Solution No ActivityExample P Omadine MDS Solution 250 0.135%Example 7 Omadine MDS Solution 30 0.135% ZnCl.sub.2 0.1%__________________________________________________________________________
The results .[.reported in Table 2.]. .Iadd.of experimental analyses .Iaddend.indicated .[.no activity for ZnCl.sub.2, activity of 250 ppm for Omadine MDS alone and 30 ppm for the combination of ZnCl.sub.2 with Omadine MDS. This indicates.]. an eightfold increase in activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa for the combination of ZnCl.sub.2 with omadine MDS compared to the activity of ZnCl.sub.2 alone or Omadine MDS alone.
In still further comparison study compositions were prepared and evaluated both by the minimum inhibitory concentration method and the zone of inhibition. The results were similar for all salts tested at 1% concentration with Omadine MDS at 0.5%. .[.The activities for all the controls were from 125 to 550 ppm using the M.I.C. method and from 4 to 8 ppm for the combination of zinc salt with Omadine MDS..]. Again, the zone of inhibition was almost non-existent for controls 0-2 mm and 10-14 mm for the combination of the magnesium sulfate adduct and ZnCl.sub.2 combination employed in the present invention.
In Table 3 there is disclosed a surgical scrub composition Composition I employing the anhydrous foaming base composition of pending application Ser. No. .Iadd.028,072 .Iaddend.containing petroleum jelly, mineral oil, glycerine, TiO.sub.2 and sodium cocoyl isethionate and the magnesium sulfate adduct and ZnCl.sub.2 combination of the present invention and the control base Composition II.
TABLE 3______________________________________Formula Composition I Composition II______________________________________Petroleum Jelly 31.00 31.00Mineral Oil 19.50 19.50Glycerin 5.00 5.00TiO.sub.2 0.50 0.50Na Cocoyl Isethionate 40.00 42.00Omadine MDS 2.00 2.00ZnCl.sub.2 (50% Solution) 2.00______________________________________
When tested for antimicrobial activity, the minimum inhibitory concentration activity was enhanced .[.from 125 ppm for the 2% Omadine MDS control Composition II to 2.0 ppm.]. for the Omadine MDS 2%, ZnCl.sub.2 1% in Composition I.[.. This is over.]..Iadd., providing .Iaddend.a .[.sixtyfold.]. .Iadd.substantial .Iaddend.increase in activity .Iadd.against Pseudomonas aeruginosa compared to Composition II.Iaddend...[.Evidence for synergism was also observed against Staphylococcus aureus, for Composition I activity is 0.003 ppm, while the control Composition II with 2% Omadine is 0.1 ppm. This is a thirty-threefold increase in activity. For Staphylococcus epidermidis, once again the synergism was confirmed, with 0.0007 ppm activity for the 2% Omadine MDS 1% ZnCl.sub.2 combination, while the Composition II control is 0.006 ppm. This is an elevenfold increase in activity..].
Claims
  • 1. An antimicrobial composition comprising the magnesium sulfate adduct of 2,2'-dithiobis-pyridine-1,1'-dioxide and a water soluble zinc salt, the zinc salt being in an amount from about 1 to 10 parts by weight per part of the antimicrobial adduct.
  • 2. An antimicrobial composition according to claim 1 wherein the zinc salt is selected from the group consisting of zinc chloride, zinc acetate, zinc sulfate, zinc nitrate and zinc phenylsulfonate.
  • 3. An antimicrobial system according to claim 1 wherein the zinc salt is zinc chloride.
  • 4. An antimicrobial composition according to claim 1, 2 or 3 wherein the zinc salt is in an amount of 1 part by weight per part of the microbial adduct.
  • 5. An antimicrobial composition according to claims 1, 2 or 3 wherein the magnesium sulfate adduct is in an amount from about 0.1 to 1.5% by weight and the zinc salt is in an amount from about 0.1 to 1% by weight of the total composition.
US Referenced Citations (6)
Number Name Date Kind
3890434 Weisse et al. Jun 1975
4152431 Klein May 1979
4161526 Gorman Jul 1979
4163783 Klein et al. Aug 1979
4235873 Packman Nov 1980
4410446 Cheng et al. Oct 1983
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number Date Country
54-15939 Feb 1979 JPX
60-16973 Jan 1985 JPX
Non-Patent Literature Citations (6)
Entry
Chemical Abstract 69:343387w (1968); Okomoto, et al.
Chemical Abstract 80:91617x (1974); Elkhouly, et al.
Chemical Abstract 87:161376p (1977); Wedig et al.
Chemical Abstract 88:177003w (1978); Wedig, et al.
Chemical Abstract 91:32995y (1979); Giloor, et al.
The Merck Index 9th Ed. (1976)-pp. 1307-1309; Merck & Co.
Reissues (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 774725 Sep 1985