Bacteria have acquired resistance to drugs
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A new class of antibiotics offers massive benefits to today's
patients - but could place future generations in danger, say
experts.
Some scientists say that the principle behind a new crop of drugs
currently under development will make it far tougher for bugs to
become resistant to them.
This is because they work in the same way as many of the methods
which the body itself has always used to rid itself of bacterial
infections.
But other researchers say that it is quite possible that bacteria
will acquire resistance - and when they do, this will make life far
more difficult, as our own defence mechanisms will be rendered far
less potent.
Cuts and grazes
Even minor cuts and grazes will take far longer to heal, they
warn, and could even progress to far more serious bacterial
infections.
In addition, the researchers say, the body's inability to keep
down other types of bacteria could lead to a surge in chronic
illnesses such as heart disease and cystic fibrosis.
The new family of drugs, called "Ramp" antimicrobials, are being
developed in response to growing resistance to existing antibiotic
drugs.
There are fears that virtually all drugs could be rendered far
less effective as microbes evolve to dodge their attacks.
Infection risk
However Professor Graham Bell, from McGill University in Canada,
warns that the new antibiotics pose "a serious and unprecedented"
risk to public health.
He warns that regulatory authorities tend not to look many years
ahead when deciding whether to grant licences to new drugs.
"They are poorly designed to detect even grave and highly
probable risks to public health arising from the population biology
of microbes.
"Instead of dismissing the possibility that widespread resistance
will evolve, we should use the bitter experience that we have gained
from conventional antibiotics to plan for it."
Researchers are learning more about how bacteria manage to
acquire resistance to the drugs designed to wipe them out.
Because they reproduce so often, genetic mutations arise
frequently, and occasionally these will equip the bacterium better
to resist antibiotics.
When antibiotics are given - particularly if a full course is not
completed - this gives the resistant colonies a chance to get
established and develop further resistance.
Research has shown that certain bacteria species can even
exchange genetic material - possibly including resistance genes -
from other species simply through close contact. |