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Title: Bacterial resistance
Description: 2nd year Pharmacy notes, very good summary of points needed for bacterial resistance, great read for before exams. How resistance comes about, mechanisms of resistance and 'superbugs' that HCP's should be aware of in practice.

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Bacterial  resistance  to  antibiotics    
 
Resistance  to  antibacterial  drugs  
• Inherent  (natural  resistance)  
àe
...
 G-­‐ve  bacteria  –  their  outer  membrane  acts  as  a  permeability  barrier    
• Acquired  resistance    
àWhen  new  antibiotic  is  used,  resistance  is  acquired  
àResults  from  changed  in  bacterial  genome    
Can  be  …  
• àVertical  evolution  =  Mutation  and  selection
...
   
 
àHorizontal  evolution  =  exchange  of  genes  between  strains  –  bacteria  
can  swap  genes  by    
• Conjugation  
• Transduction  
• Transformation  
 
Conjugation  =  cell-­‐  cell  contact,  DNA  crosses  a  sex  pilus  
Transduction=  Genes  transported  by  a  bacterial  virus  
Transformation=  genes  acquired  from  environment  
 
Mechanisms  of  resistance    
• Conversion  of  active  drug  to  inert  product  by  an  enzyme    
à  Production  of  Beta  lactamases,  convert  penicillin  àpenicilloic  acid  (not  
antibacterial)  
àClavulanic  acid  inhibits  beta  lactamase
...
 
àAminoglycosides  inactivated  by  adenyl/acetyl/nucleotidyl  transferases  
àChloramphenicol  can  be  broken  down  by  acetylation    
 
• Reduction  to  cellular  permeability    
àCan  be  a  change  in  the  cell  wall,  antagonism  of  antibiotic  (transport  
process)  or  generation  of  an  efflux  pump  (pump  drug  out  of  the  cell)  
àDoesn’t  allow  toxic  levels  of  drug  to  be  reached  inside  the  cell
...
 aureus  –  changes  
penicillin  binding  proteins)
...
coli  for  UTI  treatment    
 
 
 

Spread  of  superbugs  
• Harder  to  treat  
• Resistant  strains    
• May  also  have  more  side  effects    
• Dominate  in  hospital  settings  
 
Clostridium  difficile    
• The  overuse  and  misuse  of  antibiotics  kills  the  normal  flora  of  bacteria  in  
the  body
...
difficile  to  take  over  and  release  toxins
...
 
• In  2004  Reporting  of  such  cases  became  mandatory  
 
Glycopeptide  resistant  enterococci  (GRE)  
• E
...
e
Title: Bacterial resistance
Description: 2nd year Pharmacy notes, very good summary of points needed for bacterial resistance, great read for before exams. How resistance comes about, mechanisms of resistance and 'superbugs' that HCP's should be aware of in practice.