Influence of an antimicrobial treatment on the strength properties of polyamide/elastane weft-knitted fabric

2007 
Polyamide/elastane weft-knitted fabric, as a suitable compression material, was treated with gentamicin sulfate and a natural antimicrobial preparation of the autochthonous essential oil of Picea abies. The antimicrobial bioactivity of the treated fabric in vitro was tested for different groups of bacteria and a fungus (Staphylococcus aureus, Escherichia coli, Klabsiella, and Candida albicans). The results of the experiment showed that the antimicrobial-treated knitted fabric expressed a wide range of bactericidal, fungicidal, and bacteriostatic activity versus the various groups of microorganisms. The influence of the antimicrobial treatments on the tensile strength and elongation, tear strength and elongation, stiffness, and elasticity of the chosen test material was also examined. These properties of the fabric were changed after the antimicrobial treatments. Both the tensile strength and tear strength increased about 14% after the treatment. The scope of the experiment also included the testing of the compression distribution at the skin/knitted fabric interface on the legs of human test subjects. Pressure generated by the application of the knitted fabric on the leg surface increased in correlation with a decrease in the leg circumference. On the basis of these observations, it was concluded that the knitted fabric could be used as a compression textile before and after the treatment. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 103: 4012–4019, 2007
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