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First Article
Bacteria and Drug Resistance
MEDLINE 1985-1996
(BACTERIA? AND RESISTAN?)/TI(820)
DRUG RESISTANCE, MICROBIAL/DE AND BACTERIA/DE(4216)
BIOSIS 1969-1996
(BACTERIA? AND RESISTANT?)/TI(2806)
ANTIBIOTIC(W)RESISTANCE/DE AND BACTERIA/DE(203)
The following are a few journal articles relating to antibiotic
resistant bacteria that the search located: for additional information or
questions about locating the literature, call 1-800-28-FACTS.
1. Berkowitz, F. Antibiotic resistance to bacteria. SOUTHERN MEDICAL
JOURNAL Aug 1995;88(8):797-804.
Antibiotic resistance in bacteria has emerged as a medical
catastrophe. This results from the speed at which bacteria multiply and
are spread, and the ease with which they can change their genetic material
or acquire new genes. They exert biochemical resistance by preventing
entry of the drug, by rapidly extruding the drug, or by enzymatically
inactivating the drug or altering its molecular target. The presence of
antibiotics in the internal environments of human beings and animals
provides a selective pressure for any resistant organisms to become
predominant. Examples of antibiotic resistance in several important human
pathogens are Streptococcus pneumoniae, enteroccocci, staphylococci,
enteric bacilli, Haemophilus influenzae, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Neisseria
meningitidis, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
2. Tenover, F., Hughes, J. The challenges of emerging infectious diseases.
Development and spread of multiply-resistant bacterial pathogens. Journal
of the American Medical Association, Jan 24-31, 1996;275(4):300-4.
Resistance is an emerging problem in human medicine and the effects of
resistance are being noted on an ever-increasing scale. Whether it is
treatment of nosocomial bacteremia in New York City or community-acquired
dysentery in Central Africa, multiresistant organisms are diminishing our
ability to control the spread of infectious diseases. Clearly, the rate at
which resistant organisms develop is not solely a function of the use of
antimicrobials in humans, but is also highly influenced by the use of these
agents in veterinary medicine, animal husbandry, agriculture, and
aquaculture, as has been emphasized at recent meetings sponsored by
organizations such as Rockefeller University and the America Society for
Microbiology, and in the report on bacterial resistance recently issued by
the US Office of Technology Assessment. We have entered an era where both
physicians and patients must take on the responsibility to use
antimicrobials wisely and judiciously. Just as in the days at the turn of
the century when the public was an integral part of establishing
quarantines for infectious diseases, now again the public's cooperation
must be sought for this latest threat to public health. The multiresistant
organisms of the 1990s are a grim warning of the possibility of the
postantibiotic era.
3. Thornsberry, C. Trends in antimicrobial resistance among today's
bacterial pathogens. Pharmacotherapy Jan-Feb 1995;15(1 pt 2):3S-8S.
Resistance of nosocomial and community-acquired pathogens to antimicrobial
agents is a serious problem with significant clinical consequences.
Microbiologic surveillance data, such as those provided by the ational
Nosocomial Infections Surveillance System, supply information on current
nosocomial pathogens in the United States. Many species show resistance to
commonly used antimicrobials and, in many cases, it is emerging resistance.
Resistance in many gram-negative bacteria is caused by beta-lactamase
production.
Escherichia coli, the leading nosocomial pathogen, is capable of
hyperproducing TEM-1 beta-lactamase. A novel form of resistance in
Kelbesiella pneumoniae and E. coli is caused by extended-spectrum
cephalosporinases. Many Enterobacteriaceae can be induced to produce group
1 beta-latamase by exposure to broad-spectrum cephalosporins and other
beta-lactams. Thirty percent of Haemophilus influenzae isolates are
resistant to ampicillin because of beta-lactamase production. Issues of
concern in gram-positive species include multiple antimicrobial resistance
in methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, enterococci, and coagulase-
negative staphylococci, and increasing beta-lactam resistance in
Streptococcus pneumoniae. To minimize the development of resistance,
antimicrobials must be administered judiciously, and infection-control
practices must be instituted and followed.
4. Pechere, J. Bacterial resistance: new threats, new challenges. SUPPORT
CARE CANCER May 1993; 1(3): 124-9.
Bacterial resistance remains a major concern. Recently, genetic transfers
from saprophytic, non-pathogenic, species to pathogenic S. pneumoniae and
N. Meningitidis have introduced multiple changes in the penicillin target
molecules, leading to rapidly growing penicillin resistance. In
enterobacteriaceae, a succession of minute mutations has generated new
beta-lactamases with increasingly expanded spectrum, now covering
practically all valuable beta-lactam antibiotics. Resistance emerges in the
hospital environment but also, and increasingly, in the community bacteria.
Widespread resistance is probably associated with antibiotic use, abuse,
and misuse but direct causality links are difficult to establish. In some
countries as in some hospitals, unusual resistance profiles seem to
correspond to unusual antibiotic practices.
For meeting the resistance challenge, no simple solutions are available,
but combined efforts may help. For improving the situation, the following
methods can be proposed. At the world level, a better definition of
appropriate antibiotic policies should be sought, together with strong
education programmes on the use of antibiotics and the control of cross-
infections, plus controls on the strategies used by pharmaceutical
companies for promoting antibiotics. At various local levels, accurate
guidelines should be adapted to each institution and there should be
regularly updated formularies using scientific, and not only economic,
criteria; molecular technologies for detecting subtle epidemic variations
and emergence of new genes should be developed and regular information on
the resistance profiles should be available to all physicians involved in
the prevention and therapy of infections.
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