Dictionary Definition
antibiotic adj : of or relating to antibiotic
drugs n : a chemical substance derivable from a mold or bacterium
that kills microorganisms and cures infections; "when antibiotics
were first discovered they were called wonder drugs" [syn: antibiotic
drug]
User Contributed Dictionary
Translations
substance that destroys of inhibits bacteria
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 抗生素
- Croatian: antibiotik
- Czech: antibiotikum
- Finnish: antibiootti
- French: antibiotique
- German: Antibiotikum
- Japanese: 抗生物質
- Russian: антибиотик
Adjective
- Of or relating to antibiotics.
Translations
of or relating to antibiotics
- Czech: antibiotický
- Finnish: antibioottinen
- French: antibiotique
- German: antibiotisch
- Russian: антибиотический
Extensive Definition
An antibiotic (from Latin
anti, "against" and Greek
βιοτικός - biotikos, "fit for life") is a chemotherapeutic
agent that inhibits or abolishes the growth of micro-organisms,
such as bacteria,
fungi, or protozoa. The term originally
referred to any agent with biological activity against living
organisms; however, "antibiotic" now refers to substances with
anti-bacterial, anti-fungal, or anti-parasitical activity. The
first widely used antibiotic compounds used in modern medicine were
produced and isolated from living organisms, such as the penicillin class produced by
fungi in the genus Penicillium, or
streptomycin from
bacteria of the genus Streptomyces.
With advances in organic
chemistry many antibiotics are now also obtained by chemical
synthesis, such as the sulfa
drugs. Many antibiotics are relatively small
molecules with a molecular
weight less than 2000 Da.
Overview
Unlike previous treatments for infections, which often consisted of administering chemical compounds such as strychnine and arsenic, with high toxicity also against mammals, antibiotics from microbes had no or few side effects and high effective target activity. Most anti-bacterial antibiotics do not have activity against viruses, fungi, or other microbes. Anti-bacterial antibiotics can be categorized based on their target specificity: "narrow-spectrum" antibiotics target particular types of bacteria, such as Gram-negative or Gram-positive bacteria, while broad-spectrum antibiotics affect a wide range of bacteria.The environment of individual antibiotics varies
with the location of the infection, the ability of the antibiotic
to reach the site of infection, and the ability of the microbe to
inactivate or excrete the antibiotic. Some anti-bacterial
antibiotics destroy bacteria (bactericidal), whereas others prevent
bacteria from multiplying (bacteriostatic).
Oral antibiotics are simply ingested, while
intravenous
antibiotics are used in more serious cases, such as deep-seated
systemic
infections. Antibiotics may also sometimes be administered
topically, as with
eye
drops or ointments.
In the last few years three new classes of
antibiotics have been brought into clinical use. This follows a
40-year hiatus in discovering new classes of antibiotic compounds.
These new antibiotics are of the following three classes: cyclic
lipopeptides (daptomycin), glycylcyclines (tigecycline), and
oxazolidinones (linezolid). Tigecycline is a broad-spectrum
antibiotic, while the two others are used for gram-positive
infections. These developments show promise as a means to
counteract the growing bacterial resistance to existing
antibiotics.
History
see also Timeline of antibioticsAlthough potent antibiotic compounds for
treatment of human diseases caused by bacteria (such as tuberculosis, bubonic
plague, or leprosy)
were not isolated and identified until the twentieth century, the
first known use of antibiotics was by the ancient
Chinese over 2,500 years ago. Many other ancient cultures,
including the ancient
Egyptians and ancient
Greeks already used molds and plants to treat infections, owing to the
production of antibiotic substances by these organisms, a
phenomenon known as antibiosis Antibiosis was
first described in 1877 in bacteria when Louis
Pasteur and Robert Koch
observed that an airborne bacillus could inhibit the growth of
Bacillus
anthracis. The antibiotic properties of Penicillium sp. were
first described in France by Ernest
Duchesne in 1897. However, his work went by without much notice
from the scientific community until Alexander
Fleming's discovery of Penicillin (see
below).
Modern research on antibiotic therapy began in
Germany
with the development of the narrow-spectrum antibiotic Salvarsan by
Paul
Ehrlich in 1909, for the first time allowing an efficient
treatment of the then-widespread problem of Syphilis. The
drug, which was also effective against other spirochaetal infections, is
no longer in use in modern medicine.
Antibiotics were further developed in Britain
following the discovery of Penicillin in
1928 by Alexander
Fleming. More than ten years later, Ernst Chain
and
Howard Florey became interested in his work, and came up with
the purified form of penicillin. The three shared the 1945 Nobel
Prize in Medicine. In 1939, Rene Dubos
isolated gramicidin,
one of first antibiotics to be manufactured commercially used
during World War II proving highly effective in the treatment of
wounds and ulcers.. Florey credited Dubos for reviving his research
on penicillin
Production
Since the first pioneering efforts of
Florey and Chain
in 1939, the importance of antibiotics to medicine has led to much
research into discovering and producing them. The process of
production usually involves screening of wide ranges of
microorganisms, testing and modification. Production is carried out
using fermentation,
usually in strongly aerobic fermentation.
Usage
Antibiotics are only intended to be used by a
doctor's prescription. Doctors always specify dosage and duration
of antibiotic treatment. It is very important to follow the
prescription and complete the entire course (see Antibiotic
misuse).
In general, alcohol should be avoided when taking
antibiotics as it causes a variety of things to happen in the body,
and some of them can impair the effectiveness of antibiotics; It
also competes with liver enzymes, which break down the antibiotics.
Additionally, certain antibiotics chemically react with alcohol,
leading to serious body reactions (severe vomiting, nausea, etc.).
These include (but not limited to): Metronidazole, Tinidazole,
co-trimoxazole, cephamandole, ketoconazole. Such antibiotics are
explicitly prohibited to be used with alcohol.
Side effects
Possible side effects are varied, depending on
the antibiotics used and the microbial organisms targeted. Adverse
effects can range from fever and nausea to major allergic reactions
including photodermatitis. One of
the more common side effects is diarrhea, sometimes caused by
the anaerobic bacterium Clostridium
difficile, which results from the antibiotic disrupting the
normal balance of the intestinal
flora, Such overgrowth of pathogenic bacteria may be alleviated
by ingesting probiotics during a course of
antibiotics. . An antibiotic-induced disruption of the population
of the bacteria normally present as constituents of the normal
vaginal flora may also occur, and may lead to overgrowth of yeast
species of the genus Candida
in the vulvo-vaginal area. Other side effects can result from
interaction with other drugs, such as elevated risk of tendon damage from administration
of a quinolone
antibiotic with a systemic corticosteroid.
Hypothetically, some antibiotics might interfere
with the efficiency of birth control pills. However there have been
no conclusive studies that proved that; on the contrary, the
majority of the studies indicate that antibiotics do not interfere
with contraception, even though there is a possibility that a small
percentage of women may experience decreased effectiveness of birth
control pills while taking an antibiotic.
Antibiotic misuse
Common forms of antibiotic misuse include failure
to take the entire prescribed course of the antibiotic, or failure
to rest for sufficient recovery to allow clearance of the infecting
organism. These practices may facilitate the development of
bacterial populations with antibiotic
resistance. Inappropriate antibiotic treatment is another
common form of antibiotic misuse. A common example is the
prescription and use of antibiotics to treat viral infections such
as the common cold
that have no effect.
Animals
It is estimated that greater than 70% of the antibiotics used in U.S. are given to feed animals (e.g. chickens, pigs and cattle) in the absence of disease. Antibiotic use in food animal production has been associated with the emergence of antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria including Salmonella spp., Campylobacter spp., Escherichia coli, and Enterococcus spp. Evidence from some US and European studies suggest that these resistant bacteria cause infections in humans that do not respond to commonly prescribed antibiotics. In response to these practices and attendant problems, several organizations (e.g. The American Society for Microbiology (ASM), American Public Health Association (APHA) and the American Medical Association (AMA)) have called for restrictions on antibiotic use in food animal production and an end to all non-therapeutic uses. However, delays in regulatory and legislative actions to limit the use of antibiotics are common, and may include resistance to these changes by industries using or selling antibiotics, as well as time spent on research to establish causal links between antibiotic use and emergence of untreatable bacterial diseases. Today, there are two federal bills (S.742 and H.R. 2562) aimed at phasing out non-therapeutic antibiotics in US food animal production. These bills are endorsed by public health and medical organizations including the American Nurses Association (ANA), the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), and the American Public Health Association (APHA).Humans
One study on respiratory tract infections found "physicians were more likely to prescribe antibiotics to patients who they believed expected them, although they correctly identified only about 1 in 4 of those patients". Multifactorial interventions aimed at both physicians and patients can reduce inappropriate prescribing of antibiotics. Delaying antibiotics for 48 hours while observing for spontaneous resolution of respiratory tract infections may reduce antibiotic usage; however, this strategy may reduce patient satisfaction.Excessive use of prophylactic antibiotics in
travelers may also be classified as misuse.
Antibiotic resistance
Use or misuse of antibiotics may result in the
development of antibiotic resistance by the infecting organisms,
similar to the development of pesticide
resistance in insects. Evolutionary
theory of genetic
selection requires that as close as possible to 100% of the
infecting organisms be killed off to avoid selection of resistance;
if a small subset of the population survives the treatment and is
allowed to multiply, the average susceptibility of this new
population to the compound will be much less than that of the
original population, since they have descended from those few
organisms that survived the original treatment. This survival often
results from an inheritable resistance to the compound that was
infrequent in the original population, but became more frequent in
the descendants.
Antibiotic resistance has become a serious
problem in both developed and underdeveloped nations. By 1984 half
of those with active tuberculosis in the
United
States had a strain that resisted at least one antibiotic. In
certain settings, such as hospitals and some childcare locations,
the rate of antibiotic resistance is so high that the usual,
low-cost antibiotics are virtually useless for treatment of
frequently seen infections. This leads to more frequent use of
newer and more expensive compounds, which in turn leads to the rise
of resistance to those drugs. A struggle to develop new antibiotics
ensues to prevent losing future battles against infection. To date,
tuberculosis and pneumococcus are prominent examples of once easily
treated infections where drug-resistance has become a
problem.
Another example of selection is Staphylococcus
aureus ('golden staph'), which could be treated successfully
with penicillin in
the 1940s and 1950s. At present, nearly all strains are resistant
to penicillin, and many are resistant to nafcillin, leaving only a
narrow selection of drugs such as vancomycin useful for
treatment. The situation is complicated by the fact that genes
coding for antibiotic resistance can be transferred between
bacteria via plasmids,
making it possible for bacteria never exposed to an antibiotic to
acquire resistance from those which have. The problem of antibiotic
resistance is made more widespread when antibiotics are used to
treat disorders in which they have no efficacy, such as the common
cold or other viral complaints, and when they are used broadly as
prophylaxis rather than treatment (as in, for example, animal
feeds), because this exposes more bacteria to selection for
resistance.
Resistance modifying agents
One solution to combat resistance currently being
researched is the development of pharmaceutical compounds that
would revert multiple antibiotic resistance. These so called
resistance modifying agents may target and inhibit MDR mechanisms,
rendering the bacteria susceptible to antibiotics to which they
were previously resistant. These compounds targets include among
others
- Efflux inhibition(Phe-Arg-β-naphthylamide)
- Beta Lactamase inhibitors - Including Clavulanic acid and Sulbactam
Beyond antibiotics
The comparative ease of identifying compounds
which safely cured bacterial infections was more difficult to
duplicate in treatments of fungal and viral infections. Antibiotic
research led to great strides in the knowledge of biochemistry, establishing
large differences between the cellular and molecular physiology of
the bacterial cell and that of the mammalian cell. This explained
the observation that many compounds that are toxic to bacteria are
non-toxic to human cells. In contrast, the basic biochemistries of
the fungal cell and the mammalian cell are much more
similar. This restricts the development and use of therapeutic
compounds that attack a fungal cell, while not harming mammalian
cells. Similar problems exist in antibiotic treatments of viral diseases. Human viral
metabolic biochemistry is very closely similar to human
biochemistry, and the possible targets of antiviral compounds are
restricted to very few components unique to a mammalian
virus.
Research into bacteriophages for use as
antibiotics is presently ongoing. Several types of bacteriophage
appear to exist that are specific for each bacterial taxonomic
group or species. Research into bacteriophages for medicinal use is
just beginning, but has led to advances in microscopic imaging.
While bacteriophages provide a possible solution to the problem of
antibiotic resistance, there is no clinical evidence yet that they
can be deployed as therapeutic agents to cure disease.
Phage
therapy has been used in the past on humans in the US and
Europe during the 1920s and 1930s, but these treatments had mixed
results. With the discovery of penicillin in the 1940s, Europe and
the US changed therapeutic strategies to using antibiotics.
However, in the former Soviet Union phage therapies continued to be
studied. In the Republic of Georgia, the Eliava Institute of
Bacteriophage, Microbiology & Virology continues to research
the use of phage therapy. Various companies and foundations in
North America and Europe are currently researching phage therapies.
However, phage are living and reproducing; concerns about genetic
engineering in freely released viruses currently limit certain
aspects of phage therapy.
Bacteriocins
are also a growing alternative to the classic small-molecule
antibiotics . Different classes of bacteriocins have different
potential as therapeutic agents. Small molecule bacteriocins
(microcins, for
example, and lantibiotics) may be similar
to the classic antibiotics; colicin-like bacteriocins are
more likely to be narrow-spectrum, demanding new molecular
diagnostics prior to therapy but also not raising the spectre of
resistance to the same degree. One drawback to the large molecule
antibiotics is that they will have relative difficulty crossing
membranes and travelling systemically throughout the body. For this
reason, they are most often proposed for application topically or
gastrointestinally. Because bacteriocins are peptides, they are
more readily engineered than small molecules. This may permit the
generation of cocktails and dynamically improved antibiotics that
are modified to overcome resistance.
Probiotics are
another alternative that goes beyond traditional antibiotics by
employing a live culture which may establish itself as a symbiont,
competing, inhibiting, or simply interfering with colonization by
pathogens. It may produce antibiotics or bacteriocins, essentially
providing the drug in vivo and in situ, potentially avoiding the
side effects of systemic administration.
References
External links
- Antibiotic News from Genome News Network (GNN)
- Are Antibiotics Killing Us? -Discover Magazine
- JAAPA: New antibiotics useful in primary care
- A new method for controlling bacterial activity without antibiotics - Research conducted at the Hebrew University
- BURDEN of Resistance and Disease in European Nations
- Antibiogram technique video
- European Surveillance of Antimicrobial Consumption (ESAC)
Resources
antibiotic in Afrikaans: Antibiotikum
antibiotic in Arabic: مضاد حيوي
antibiotic in Bengali: অ্যান্টিবায়োটিক
antibiotic in Bosnian: Antibiotik
antibiotic in Bulgarian: Антибиотик
antibiotic in Catalan: Antibiòtic
antibiotic in Czech: Antibiotikum
antibiotic in Danish: Antibiotikum
antibiotic in German: Antibiotika
antibiotic in Modern Greek (1453-):
Αντιβιoτικό
antibiotic in Spanish: Antibiótico
antibiotic in Esperanto: Antibiotiko
antibiotic in Persian: آنتیبیوتیک
antibiotic in Faroese: Antibiotika
antibiotic in French: Antibiotique
antibiotic in Galician: Antibiótico
antibiotic in Korean: 항생제
antibiotic in Croatian: Antibiotik
antibiotic in Ido: Antibiotiko
antibiotic in Indonesian: Antibiotika
antibiotic in Italian: Antibiotico
antibiotic in Hebrew: אנטיביוטיקה
antibiotic in Lithuanian: Antibiotikas
antibiotic in Hungarian: Antibiotikum
antibiotic in Malay (macrolanguage):
Antibiotik
antibiotic in Dutch: Antibioticum
antibiotic in Japanese: 抗生物質
antibiotic in Norwegian: Antibiotika
antibiotic in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Antibiotikum
antibiotic in Polish: Antybiotyki
antibiotic in Portuguese: Antibiótico
antibiotic in Romanian: Antibiotic
antibiotic in Quechua: Unquy muhu wañuchiq
antibiotic in Russian: Антибиотики
antibiotic in Simple English: Antibiotic
antibiotic in Slovak: Antibiotikum
antibiotic in Slovenian: Antibiotik
antibiotic in Serbian: Антибиотик
antibiotic in Finnish: Antibiootti
antibiotic in Swedish: Antibiotikum
antibiotic in Thai: ยาปฏิชีวนะ
antibiotic in Vietnamese: Kháng sinh
antibiotic in Turkish: Antibiyotik
antibiotic in Ukrainian: Антибіотик
antibiotic in Urdu: ضد حیوی
antibiotic in Yiddish: אנטיביאטיק
antibiotic in Chinese: 抗生素
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Chloromycetin, Terramycin, acaricide, actinomycin, alexipharmic, amphotericin, antacid, anthelmintic, antidotal, antimicrobial, antipyretic, antiseptic, antitoxic, bacitracin, bacteriostatic, bug bomb,
carbamate insecticide, carbomycin, chemosterilant,
chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticide, chlortetracycline,
cloxacillin, contact
poison, defoliant,
dihydrostreptomycin,
disinfectant,
eradicant, erythromycin, febrifugal, fradicin, fumigant, fungicide, germicide, gramicidin, griseofulvin, herbicide, insect powder,
insecticide,
methicillin,
microbicide,
miticide, mitomycin, organic chlorine,
organic phosphate insecticide, penicillin, pesticide, poison, rat poison, roach paste,
roach powder, rodenticide, stomach poison,
streptomycin,
streptothricin,
subtilin, sulfa, systemic, systemic insecticide,
tetracycline,
toxic, toxicant, toxin, tylocin, tyrothricin, vancomycin, venin, venom, vermicide, viomycin, virus, weed killer