Journal
MEDICAL HYPOTHESES
Volume 80, Issue 3, Pages 237-240Publisher
CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.mehy.2012.11.037
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- Centre for Materials Science at the University of Central Lancashire
- Leeds Metropolitan University
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With the recent increase in bacterial resistance to conventional antibiotics, the early-stage detection and control of infection has become imperative in the fight against opportunistic pathogens in healthcare. The traditional beta-lactam wonder-drugs (e.g. penicillin and cephalosporins), are rendered inactive due to enzymatic hydrolysis by bacterial beta-lactamase enzymes as a bacterial defence mechanism. However, this deactivation mechanism produces different responses in the two aforementioned drugs - with the cephalosporins showing a molecular rearrangement mechanism which could be utilised for prodrug delivery. This unique mechanism could mean that inactive forms of cephalosporin antibiotics, once used as chemotherapeutics in oncology, could once again be used in the fight against disease as sensors to detect and treat bacterial colonisation. Therefore, we hypothesize that cephalosporin-dye bandages might provide an effective method to visually detect, and subsequently control, the early stages of an infection using photoantimicrobial chemotherapy (PACT). (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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