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Lecture 9 - we will discuss the following topics:
II. Control of Microbial Growth (Chapter 7 and pp. 554-558)
A. Terminology
1. sterilization - destroy all viable cells, spores, viruses
2. disinfection - kill pathogens on inanimate surfaces
3. antisepsis - kill pathogens on living tissue
4. de-germ – mechanical removal
4. sanitization - lower # of pathogens to acceptable levels
B. How do we kill microbes?
1. Nonspecific – work against almost all microbes in the same way
a. Physical methods
b. Chemical methods
i. phenols - denature proteins, disrupt membranes
Ex.
ii. halogens - oxidation of cellular material
Exs.
iii. alcohols - denature proteins, dissolve lipid membranes
Ex.
2. Specific – specifically kill some types of microbes, others are left unharmed.
Antibiotics (pp. 554-558)
Antibiotic – a natural substance produced by one microorganism that inhibits the growth of another
a. How were antibiotics discovered?
Alexander Fleming (1928)
Penicilliumnotatum (Eukarya – fungi)
b. How do antibiotics work?
Bactericidal - kill
Bactriostatic – inhibit
Selective toxicity – no harm to host
c. Cellular Target Sites of Antibiotics – 4 - Important
cell wall synthesis
- prevent synthesis of new peptidoglycan
- works only on growing cells
- selective how?
- least toxic
Exs.penicillin, methacilllin, cephalosporin
plasma membrane integrity and/or function
- alter permeability
- selective how?
Eukarya –
Bacteria –
Exs.polymyxin B, nystatin
nucleic acid synthesis
- interfere with enzymes gyrase and polymerase
- selective how?
Ex. rifampin, quinolones like ciprofloxacin
protein synthesis
- target 70S ribosome
- greater toxicity – why?
Exs.tetracycline, chloramphenicol, erythromycin
3. Antibiotic Resistance
a. history
1940s -
1969 -
1980s -
1980s -
1990s and on -
b. how did we get in to this predicament?
amount manufactured -
number of prescriptions -
Antibiotic resistance can develop extremely rapidly - even in a patient receiving treatment in a hospital
Notes from clinical case:
Assignment
Read Chapter 7 and pages 554-558
Review 1, 2, 5, 7- 9
MC 1,9,10
CT 1-3
CA 3
FYI
How do you know if an antibiotic is going to work?
You should feel better within 24-48 hours of starting antibiotic treatment.
If you do not feel better:
- You have a viral infection and not a bacterial infection OR
- You have a bacterial infection but the antibiotic prescribed is not effective against the bacteria you have OR
- You have a bacterial infection but bacteria are resistant to the antibiotic that was prescribed
Then you should contact your doctor and let her/him know that the antibiotic is not working.
What can you do to reduce the likelihood that bacteria will become antibiotic resistant?
- Take the correct dosage of your antibiotic and always take the entire prescription. If you don’t, infectious bacteria that have not yet been killed off may survive, reproduce, and cause a more severe relapse, one that may not be treatable.
- Ask the doctor to tailor the prescription to fit your schedule so that you don’t miss a dose.
- Ask if you can take the antibiotic for the shortest amount of time possible.
- Ask the doctor to prescribe a narrow-spectrum antibiotic, one that works specifically against a few strains of bacteria, rather than a broad-spectrum antibiotic that targets more strains. The more bacteria exposed to antibiotics, the greater the chance that a strain will develop antibiotic resistance.
- Use the antibiotic only for the prescribed illness. Never take antibiotics that you have left over from a previous illness. Never take antibiotics that were prescribed for someone else (not even your mom).