Generic drugs, medications, prescriptions
About Antibiotic Resistance
What is an antibiotic?
Antibiotics, also known as antimicrobial drugs, are
drugs that fight infections caused by bacteria. Alexander Fleming discovered
the first antibiotic, penicillin, in 1927. After the first use of antibiotics
in the 1940s, they transformed medical care and dramatically reduced illness
and death from infectious diseases.
The term "antibiotic" originally referred to a
natural compound produced by a fungus or another microorganism that kills
bacteria which cause disease in humans or animals. Some antibiotics may be
synthetic compounds (not produced by microorganisms) that can also kill or
inhibit the growth of microbes. Technically, the term "antimicrobial agent"
refers to both natural and synthetic compounds; however, many people use the
word "antibiotic" to refer to both. Although antibiotics have many
beneficial effects, their use has created the new problem of antibiotic
resistance.
What is antibiotic resistance?
Antibiotic resistance is the ability of bacteria or other
microbes to resist the effects of an antibiotic. Antibiotic resistance occurs
when bacteria change in some way that reduces or eliminates the effectiveness
of drugs, chemicals, or other agents designed to cure or prevent infections.
The bacteria survive and continue to multiply causing more harm.
Why should I be concerned about
antibiotic resistance?
Antibiotic resistance has been called one of the
world's most pressing public health problems. Over the last decade, almost
every type of bacteria has become stronger and less responsive to antibiotic
treatment when it is really needed. These antibiotic-resistant bacteria can
quickly spread to family members, schoolmates, and co-workers - threatening the
community with a new strain of infectious disease that is more difficult to
cure and more expensive to treat. For this reason, antibiotic resistance is
among CDC's top concerns.
Antibiotic resistance can cause significant danger and
suffering for children and adults who have common infections, once easily
treatable with antibiotics. Microbes can develop resistance to specific
medicines. A common misconception is that a person's body becomes resistant to
specific drugs. However, it is microbes, not people, that become resistant to
the drugs.
If a microbe is resistant to many drugs, treating the
infections it causes can become difficult or even impossible. Someone with an
infection that is resistant to a certain medicine can pass that resistant
infection to another person. In this way, a hard-to-treat illness can be spread
from person to person. In some cases, the illness can lead to serious
disability or even death.
Why are bacteria becoming resistant
to antibiotics?
Antibiotic use promotes development of antibiotic-resistant
bacteria. Every time a person takes antibiotics, sensitive bacteria are killed,
but resistant germs may be left to grow and multiply. Repeated and improper
uses of antibiotics are primary causes of the increase in drug-resistant
bacteria.
While antibiotics should be used to treat bacterial
infections, they are not effective against viral infections like the common
cold, most sore throats, and the flu. Widespread use of antibiotics promotes
the spread of antibiotic resistance. Smart use of antibiotics is the key to
controlling the spread of resistance.
Antibiotics kill bacteria, not viruses
How do bacteria become resistant to
antibiotics?
Antibiotic resistance occurs when bacteria change in
some way that reduces or eliminates the effectiveness of drugs, chemicals, or
other agents designed to cure or prevent infections. The bacteria survive and
continue to multiply causing more harm. Bacteria can do this through several
mechanisms. Some bacteria develop the ability to neutralize the antibiotic
before it can do harm, others can rapidly pump the antibiotic out, and still
others can change the antibiotic attack site so it cannot affect the function
of the bacteria.
Antibiotics kill or inhibit the growth of susceptible
bacteria. Sometimes one of the bacteria survives because it has the ability to
neutralize or evade the effect of the antibiotic; that one bacterium can then
multiply and replace all the bacteria that were killed off. Exposure to
antibiotics therefore provides selective pressure, which makes the surviving
bacteria more likely to be resistant. In addition, bacteria that were at one time
susceptible to an antibiotic can acquire resistance through mutation of their
genetic material or by acquiring pieces of DNA that code for the resistance
properties from other bacteria. The DNA that codes for resistance can be
grouped in a single easily transferable package. This means that bacteria can
become resistant to many antimicrobial agents because of the transfer of one
piece of DNA.
The Food and Drug Administration's (FDA's) Center for
Veterinary Medicine (CVM) produced a nine-minute
animation explaining how antimicrobial resistance both emerges and
proliferates among bacteria. Over time, the use of antimicrobial drugs will
result in the development of resistant strains of bacteria, complicating
clinicians' efforts to select the appropriate antimicrobial for treatment.
How can I prevent
antibiotic-resistant infections?
Only use antibiotics when they are
likely to be beneficial
By visiting this website, you are taking the first step
to reducing your risk of getting antibiotic-resistant infections. It is
important to understand that, although they are very useful drugs, antibiotics
designed for bacterial infections are not useful for viral infections such as a
cold, cough, or flu. Some useful tips to remember are:
1. Talk with your healthcare provider about antibiotic resistance:
Ask whether an antibiotic is likely to be
beneficial for your illness
Ask what else you can do to feel better sooner.
2. Do not take an antibiotic for a viral infection like
a cold or the flu.
3. Do not save some of your antibiotic for the next
time you get sick. Discard any leftover medication once you have completed
your prescribed course of treatment.
4. Take an antibiotic exactly as the healthcare
provider tells you. Do not skip doses. Complete the prescribed course of treatment
even if you are feeling better. If treatment stops too soon, some bacteria may
survive and re-infect.
5. Do not take antibiotics prescribed for someone else.
The antibiotic may not be appropriate for your illness. Taking the wrong
medicine may delay correct treatment and allow bacteria to multiply.
6. If your healthcare provider determines that you do
not have a bacterial infection, ask about ways to help relieve your symptoms.
Do not pressure your provider to prescribe an antibiotic.
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This information is provided by the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
For more details please click here.
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