| Literature DB >> 26444324 |
Richard William Meek1, Hrushi Vyas1, Laura Jane Violet Piddock1.
Abstract
The global crisis of antibiotic resistance has reached a point where, if action is not taken, human medicine will enter a postantibiotic world and simple injuries could once again be life threatening. New antibiotics are needed urgently, but better use of existing agents is just as important. More appropriate use of antibiotics in medicine is vital, but the extensive use of antibiotics outside medical settings is often overlooked. Antibiotics are commonly used in animal husbandry, bee-keeping, fish farming and other forms of aquaculture, ethanol production, horticulture, antifouling paints, food preservation, and domestically. This provides multiple opportunities for the selection and spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Given the current crisis, it is vital that the nonmedical use of antibiotics is critically examined and that any nonessential use halted.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26444324 PMCID: PMC4621705 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1002266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Fig 1An illustration of how antibiotic resistance is selected in a bacterial population and how it proliferates.
The large circle denotes an agar plate, test tube, human, animal, or other environment containing a population of bacteria. Small filled red circles, antibiotic-resistant bacterium. Small filled blue circles, antibiotic-susceptible bacterium. Red arrow denotes horizontal transmission between bacterial cells, black arrow indicates vertical transmission to daughter cells.
Other nonmedical uses of antibiotics with evidence of or potential transfer of resistant bacteria or genes to humans and impact.
| Use | Evidence | Potential or actual impact | Alternative to antibiotic use? |
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| Oxytetracycline to treat or prevent foulbrood, bacterial infections of bee larvae that can destroy entire bee colonies. | Increased MICs of oxytetracycline in bacteria isolated from bees in countries using these control measures [ | Transmissible resistance genes in bee-infecting bacteria have also been found in bacteria isolated from humans and foodstuffs (e.g., cheese, meats). Resistance genes may spread via intermediate organisms [ | In the EU, infected hives are generally sterilized and burned, reducing unnecessary use of antibiotics. |
| Honeybees do not metabolise antibiotics, which may therefore be present at surprisingly high levels in honey [ | Could lead to the inadvertent consumption of antibiotics by people and generate subtherapeutic levels of antibiotics in the human gut, which could select resistant bacteria. | ||
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| Streptomycin, for example, was long used to treat fire blight, infection with | Streptomycin-resistant | To avoid the potential for environmental contamination, the US Environmental Protection Agency banned the import of plant agricultural produce treated with gentamicin from Latin America. | None |
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| Bacteriocins (nisin) added to dairy products and canned food to inhibit growth of pathogens such as |
| Some interest in the medical use of bacteriocins. However, there is no reason to assume that clinical use would not select for resistant strains. | None |
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| To prevent bacterial contamination during the fermentation process. | The grains produced in ethanol production form a nourishing feed known as “dried distillers” grains with soluble (DDGS), which are fed to farm animals. | Although it has been claimed that antibiotics are rendered inactive by distilling practices, a 2008 FDA report [ | None |
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| Tetracycline to prevent build-up of bacterial biofilms to which larger organisms such as barnacles attach. | Tetracycline antibiotics in antifouling paint [ | Use of tetracycline in aquatic ecosystems has the potential to select for antibiotic-resistant biofilm-causing bacteria. | None |