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Antibiotic Resistance - A Cause for Reemergence of Infections

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INDIAN JOURNAL OF PEDIATRICS
卷 87, 期 11, 页码 937-944

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SPRINGER INDIA
DOI: 10.1007/s12098-019-03180-3

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Antimicrobial resistance; Antibiotic use; Antimicrobial stewardship; Reemergence of infections

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This article can rightly be called 'the rise of the microbial phoenix'; for, all the microbial infections whose doomsday was predicted with the discovery of antibiotics, have thumbed their noses at mankind and reemerged phoenix like. The hubris generated by Sir Alexander Fleming's discovery of Penicillin in 1928, exemplified best by the comment by William H Stewart, the US Surgeon General in 1967, It is time to close the books on infectious diseases has been replaced by the realisation that the threat of antibiotic resistance is, in the words of the Chief Medical Officer of England, Dame Sally Davies, just as important and deadly as climate change and international terrorism. Antimicrobial resistance threatens to negate all the major medical advances of the last century because antimicrobial use is linked to many other fields like organ transplantation and cancer chemotherapy. Antibiotic resistance genes have been there since ancient times in response to naturally occurring antibiotics. Modern medicine has only driven further evolution of antimicrobial resistance by use, misuse, overuse and abuse of antibiotics. Resistant bacteria proliferate by natural selection when their drug sensitive comrades are removed by antibiotics. In this article the authors discuss the various causes of antimicrobial resistance and dwell in some detail on antibiotic resistance in gram-positive and gram-negative organisms. Finally they stress on the important role clinicians have in limiting the development and spread of antimicrobial resistance.

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