SharlandPraveenSaroeyEitanNaamanBerezinSDOSJornal De PediatriaSharland M, Saroey P, Berezin EN. The global threat of antimicrobial resistance - The need for standardized surveillance tools to define burden and develop interventions. J Pediatr (Rio J). 2015;91:410-2....
revolutionizing medicine and saving countless lives. However, the growing burden of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is threatening the return to a world without effective antibiotics.
aeruginosa, however resistance is still likely Conclusions Since their introduction into clinical medicine more than 60 years ago, β-lactam antibiotics have been the cornerstone of antimicrobial therapy. It is hard to imagine any other class of drugs having such a large impact on civilization. It...
Charles Penn is a WHO expert on antimicrobial resistance. He says researchers discovered that antibiotics and similar medicines are sold in many places without a doctor’s prescription. He says this increases the possibility of ove...
Invasive fungal infections pose an important threat to public health and are an under-recognized component of antimicrobial resistance, an emerging crisis worldwide. Across a period of profound global environmental change and expanding at-risk populations, human-infecting pathogenic fungi are evolving resi...
In view of the growing challenges of antimicrobial resistance and cefiderocol’s novel mechanism of cell entry, Shionogi has made cefiderocol available to patients with the most urgent need prior to commercial launch through expanded access programmes (commonly referred to as compassionate use or spe...
antimicrobial resistancedisseminationEnterobacteriaceaetransferrable fosfomycin resistanceAntimicrobial resistance is one of the major threats to the health and welfare of both humans and animals. The shortage of new antimicrobial agents has led to the re- evaluation of old antibiotics such as fosfomycin as ...
The report, called the Global Review on AMR (antimicrobial resistance), warns that by 2005, antimicrobial resistance could be responsible for killing 10 million people across the world every year, the equivalent of one person every 3 seconds - higher than the annual global death toll from cancer...
Antibiotic resistance is on the rise around the world, and there may be a surprising reason why: air pollution. In a study published Monday in the journal Lancet Planetary Health, scientists saw a connection between these two seemingly different phenomena. It’s the summer of changed climate...
This review summarizes the most recent understanding of the occurrence and mechanisms involved in the antimicrobial resistance induced by DBPsand its implications in widespread of antimicrobial resistance phenomena and human health in the drinking water realm. Disinfectants and DBPs, at both above鈥搈ini...