# | Rank | Similarity | Title + Abs. | Year | PMID |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| 9791 | 0 | 1.0000 | Beta-lactam resistance and the effectiveness of antimicrobial peptides against KPC-producing bacteria. Bacterial resistance is a problem that is giving serious cause for concern because bacterial strains such as Acinetobacter baumannii and Pseudomonas aeruginosa are difficult to treat and highly opportunistic. These bacteria easily acquire resistance genes even from other species, which confers greater persistence and tolerance towards conventional antibiotics. These bacteria have the highest death rate in hospitalized intensive care patients, so strong measures must be taken. In this review, we focus on the use of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) as an alternative to traditional drugs, due to their rapid action and lower risk of generating resistance by microorganisms. We also present an overview of beta-lactams and explicitly explain the activity of AMPs against carbapenemase-producing bacteria as potential alternative agents for infection control. | 2022 | 36042694 |
| 4317 | 1 | 0.9999 | Development and spread of bacterial resistance to antimicrobial agents: an overview. Resistance to antimicrobial agents is emerging in a wide variety of nosocomial and community-acquired pathogens. The emergence and spread of multiply resistant organisms represent the convergence of a variety of factors that include mutations in common resistance genes that extend their spectrum of activity, the exchange of genetic information among microorganisms, the evolution of selective pressures in hospitals and communities that facilitate the development and spread of resistant organisms, the proliferation and spread of multiply resistant clones of bacteria, and the inability of some laboratory testing methods to detect emerging resistance phenotypes. Twenty years ago, bacteria that were resistant to antimicrobial agents were easy to detect in the laboratory because the concentration of drug required to inhibit their growth was usually quite high and distinctly different from that of susceptible strains. Newer mechanisms of resistance, however, often result in much more subtle shifts in bacterial population distributions. Perhaps the most difficult phenotypes to detect, as shown in several proficiency testing surveys, are decreased susceptibility to beta-lactams in pneumococci and decreased susceptibility to vancomycin in staphylococci. In summary, emerging resistance has required adaptations and modifications of laboratory diagnostic techniques, empiric anti-infective therapy for such diseases as bacterial meningitis, and infection control measures in health care facilities of all kinds. Judicious use is imperative if we are to preserve our arsenal of antimicrobial agents into the next decade. | 2001 | 11524705 |
| 4318 | 2 | 0.9999 | Emerging problems of antibiotic resistance in community medicine. Emergence of antimicrobial resistance in bacteria associated with community acquired infections has made the choice of empirical therapy more difficult and more expensive. The problems due to possible spread of MRSA to the community, emergence of penicillin resistance in S. pneumoniae, ampicillin resistance in H. influenzae, and multiresistance among common enteric pathogens are highlighted. Bacteria have a remarkable ability to develop resistance to many of the newly synthesized antimicrobial agents but the appropriate use of antibiotics will delay and in many cases prevent the emergence of resistance. | 1996 | 10879217 |
| 9792 | 3 | 0.9999 | Emergence of antibiotic resistance Pseudomonas aeruginosa in intensive care unit; a critical review. The emergence of antibiotic resistant bacteria in the healthcare is a serious concern. In the Healthcare premises precisely intensive care unit are major sources of microbial diversity. Recent findings have demonstrated not only microbial diversity but also drug resistant microbes largely habitat in ICU. Pseudomonas aeruginosa found as a part of normal intestinal flora and a significant pathogen responsible for wide range of ICU acquired infection in critically ill patients. Nosocomial infection associated with this organism including gastrointestinal infection, urinary tract infections and blood stream infection. Infection caused by this organism are difficult to treat because of the presence of its innate resistance to many antibiotics (β-lactam and penem group of antibiotics), and its ability to acquire further resistance mechanism to multiple class of antibiotics, including Beta-lactams, aminoglycosides and fluoroquinolones. In the molecular evolution microbes adopted several mechanism to maintain genomic plasticity. The tool microbe use for its survival is mainly biofilm formation, quorum sensing, and horizontal gene transfer and enzyme promiscuity. Such genomic plasticity provide an ideal habitat to grow and survive in hearse environment mainly antibiotics pressure. This review focus on infection caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, its mechanisms of resistance and available treatment options. The present study provides a systemic review on major source of Pseudomonas aeruginosa in ICU. Further, study also emphasizes virulence gene/s associated with Pseudomonas aeruginosa genome for extended drug resistance. Study gives detailed overview of antibiotic drug resistance mechanism. | 2019 | 31194018 |
| 4328 | 4 | 0.9999 | Bugs for the next century: the issue of antibiotic resistance. OBJECTIVE: To address the issue of emerging antibiotic resistance and examine which organisms will continue to pose problems in the new century. METHODS: Review of articles pertaining to bacteria recognised for increasing resistance. RESULTS: Changing resistance patterns are correlated with patterns of antibiotic use. This results in fewer effective drugs against "old" established bacteria e.g. gram-positives such as Streptococcus pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus. Resistance in gram-negative bacteria is also steadily increasing. Nosocomial gram-negative bacteria are capable of many different resistance mechanisms, often rendering them multiply-resistant. Antibiotic resistance results in morbidity and mortality from treatment failures and increased health care costs. CONCLUSION: Despite extensive research and enormous resources spent, the pace of drug development has not kept up with the development of resistance. As resistance spreads, involving more and more organisms, there is concern that we may be nearing the end of the antimicrobial era. Measures that can and should be taken to counter this threat of antimicrobial resistance include co-ordinated surveillance, rational antibiotic usage, better compliance with infection control and greater use of vaccines. | 2001 | 11379419 |
| 4858 | 5 | 0.9999 | Successful interventions for gram-negative resistance to extended-spectrum beta-lactam antiobiotics. Antibiotic resistance among nosocomial pathogens in this country's hospitals adds significantly to patient morbidity and mortality, and the cost of health care. Optimism for identifying antimicrobial agents that would "solve the problem" of resistance has been replaced by a much more guarded and realistic view of the battle between humans and pathogenic microorganisms. Efforts now are more appropriately directed toward limiting, rather than completely eliminating, resistance, generally by either infection control or antibiotic control measures, and sometime combinations of the two. Methicillin-oxacillin resistance in Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) results from the expression of an acquired penicillin-binding protein (PBP 2a) that is not transferable in vitro. In most hospitals, even those with high percentages of MRSA, relatively few resistant clones are identified, suggesting transmission of individual strains throughout the hospital population. Because person-to-person spread is so important in transmission of MRSA, strategies aimed at preventing transmission of the resistant strains are remarkably effective when strictly enforced. Ceftazidime resistance in Enterobacteriaceae results from point mutations within genes that encode widely prevalent and often transferable plasmid-mediated enzymes. In addition, mutations of these genes that allow hydrolysis of cephalosporins usually result in decreased activity against other drugs, including the penicillins and beta-lactamase inhibitors. Effective measures to control ceftazidime-resistant Enterobacteriaceae have as their cornerstone limiting administration of antibiotics that select for the emergence and spread of these mutations, especially ceftazidime. The importance of infection-control techniques in limiting the prevalence of ceftazidime-resistant Enterobacteriaceae is less well established. Methods that are informed by a detailed understanding of the molecular mechanisms of resistance and resistance spread offer the best hope for limiting dissemination of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in a cost-effective manner. | 1999 | 10456609 |
| 9806 | 6 | 0.9999 | Resistance of Gram-Positive Bacteria to Current Antibacterial Agents and Overcoming Approaches. The discovery of antibiotics has created a turning point in medical interventions to pathogenic infections, but unfortunately, each discovery was consistently followed by the emergence of resistance. The rise of multidrug-resistant bacteria has generated a great challenge to treat infections caused by bacteria with the available antibiotics. Today, research is active in finding new treatments for multidrug-resistant pathogens. In a step to guide the efforts, the WHO has published a list of the most dangerous bacteria that are resistant to current treatments and requires the development of new antibiotics for combating the resistance. Among the list are various Gram-positive bacteria that are responsible for serious healthcare and community-associated infections. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium, and drug-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae are of particular concern. The resistance of bacteria is an evolving phenomenon that arises from genetic mutations and/or acquired genomes. Thus, antimicrobial resistance demands continuous efforts to create strategies to combat this problem and optimize the use of antibiotics. This article aims to provide a review of the most critical resistant Gram-positive bacterial pathogens, their mechanisms of resistance, and the new treatments and approaches reported to circumvent this problem. | 2020 | 32586045 |
| 4316 | 7 | 0.9999 | Why do antimicrobial agents become ineffectual? Antibiotic resistance has evolved over the past 50 years from a merely microbiological curiosity to a serious medical problem in hospitals all over the world. Resistance has been reported in almost all species of gram-positive and -negative bacteria to various classes of antibiotics including recently developed ones. Bacteria acquire resistance by reducing permeability and intracellular accumulation, by alteration of targets of antibiotic action, and by enzymatic modification of antibiotics. Inappropriate use of an antibiotic selects resistant strains much more frequently. Once resistant bacteria has emerged, the resistance can be transferred to other bacteria by various mechanisms, resulting in multiresistant strains. MRSA is one of the typical multiresistant nosocomial pathogens. A study of the PFGE pattern of endonuclease-digested chromosomal DNA showed that MRSA of a few clones were disseminated among newborns in the NICU of a Japanese hospital. In this regard, it is important to choose appropriate antibiotics and then after some time, to change to other classes to reduce the selection of resistant strains. Since the development of epoch-making new antibiotics is not expected in the near future, it has become very important to use existing antibiotics prudently based on mechanisms of antibiotic action and bacterial resistance. Control of nosocomial infection is also very important to reduce further spread of resistant bacteria. | 1998 | 10097676 |
| 9756 | 8 | 0.9999 | Genomewide identification of genetic determinants of antimicrobial drug resistance in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The emergence of antimicrobial drug resistance is of enormous public concern due to the increased risk of delayed treatment of infections, the increased length of hospital stays, the substantial increase in the cost of care, and the high risk of fatal outcomes. A prerequisite for the development of effective therapy alternatives is a detailed understanding of the diversity of bacterial mechanisms that underlie drug resistance, especially for problematic gram-negative bacteria such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa. This pathogen has impressive chromosomally encoded mechanisms of intrinsic resistance, as well as the potential to mutate, gaining resistance to current antibiotics. In this study we have screened the comprehensive nonredundant Harvard PA14 library for P. aeruginosa mutants that exhibited either increased or decreased resistance against 19 antibiotics commonly used in the clinic. This approach identified several genes whose inactivation sensitized the bacteria to a broad spectrum of different antimicrobials and uncovered novel genetic determinants of resistance to various classes of antibiotics. Knowledge of the enhancement of bacterial susceptibility to existing antibiotics and of novel resistance markers or modifiers of resistance expression may lay the foundation for effective therapy alternatives and will be the basis for the development of new strategies in the control of problematic multiresistant gram-negative bacteria. | 2009 | 19332674 |
| 9800 | 9 | 0.9999 | Regulation of beta-lactamase induction in gram-negative bacteria: a key to understanding the resistance puzzle. Infections caused by drug-resistant microorganisms have posed a medical challenge since the advent of antimicrobial therapy. With the emergence of resistant strains, new antibiotics were available and introduced with great success until this decade. The appearance of multiresistant microorganisms pose a real and immediate public health concern. Are we entering into the post-antibiotic era? Will we return to pre-antimicrobial-era conditions, with morbidity and mortality resulting from untreatable infectious complications? The race to stay ahead of multiresistance involves not only continued drug development and selective use but elucidation of bacterial regulation of resistance. One way to ensure continued success of antimicrobial therapy is the identification of new bacterial targets--genes and their products involved in regulating or mediating resistance. Discussion will focus on one well-defined resistance mechanism in Gram-negative bacteria, the chromosomally located amp operon, responsible for one mechanism of beta-lactam resistance. | 1994 | 7723996 |
| 9755 | 10 | 0.9999 | Phages for treatment Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection. Pseudomonas aeruginosa is denoted as one of the highly threatening bacteria to the public health. It has acquired many virulent factors and resistant genes that make it difficult to control with conventional antibiotics. Thus, bacteriophage therapy (phage therapy) is a proposed alternative to antibiotics to fight against multidrug-resistant P. aeruginosa. Many phages have been isolated that exhibit a broad spectrum of activity against P. aeruginosa. In this chapter, the common virulent factors and the prevalence of antibiotic-resistance genes in P. aeruginosa were reported. In addition, recent efforts in the field of phage therapy against P. aeruginosa were highlighted, including wild-type phages, genetically modified phages, phage cocktails, and phage in combination with antibiotics against P. aeruginosa in the planktonic and biofilm forms. Recent regulations on phage therapy were also covered in this chapter. | 2023 | 37770166 |
| 4857 | 11 | 0.9999 | The emergence of bacterial resistance and its influence on empiric therapy. The discovery of antimicrobial agents had a major impact on the rate of survival from infections. However, the changing patterns of antimicrobial resistance caused a demand for new antibacterial agents. Within a few years of the introduction of penicillin, the majority of staphylococci were resistant to that drug. In the 1960s the production of the semisynthetic penicillins provided an answer to the problem of staphylococcal resistance. In the early 1960s most Escherichia coli were susceptible to the new beta-lactam antibiotic ampicillin; by the end of that decade, plasmid-mediated beta-lactamase resistance was found in 30%-50% of hospital-acquired E. coli. Use of certain agents resulted in the selection of bacteria, such as Klebsiella, that are intrinsically resistant to ampicillin. The original cephalosporins were stable to beta-lactamase, but the use of these agents was in part responsible for the appearance of infections due to Enterobacter species, Citrobacter species, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. These bacteria, as well as Serratia, were resistant to many of the available beta-lactam agents. Aminoglycosides initially provided excellent activity against most of the facultative gram-negative bacteria. However, the widespread dissemination of the genes that cause production of the aminoglycoside-inactivating enzymes altered the use of those agents. Clearly, the evolution of bacterial resistance has altered the prescribing patterns for antimicrobial agents. Knowledge that beta-lactam resistance to ampicillin or cephalothin is prevalent is causing physicians to select as empiric therapy either a combination of two or more agents or agents to which resistance is uncommon. The new cephalosporins offer a broad spectrum of anti-bacterial activity coupled with low toxicity. However, physicians must closely follow the changing ecology of bacteria when these agents are used, because cephalosporins can also select bacteria resistant to themselves and thereby abolish their value as empiric therapy. | 1983 | 6342103 |
| 9798 | 12 | 0.9999 | Fight Against Antimicrobial Resistance: We Always Need New Antibacterials but for Right Bacteria. Antimicrobial resistance in bacteria is frightening, especially resistance in Gram-negative Bacteria (GNB). In 2017, the World Health Organization (WHO) published a list of 12 bacteria that represent a threat to human health, and among these, a majority of GNB. Antibiotic resistance is a complex and relatively old phenomenon that is the consequence of several factors. The first factor is the vertiginous drop in research and development of new antibacterials. In fact, many companies simply stop this R&D activity. The finding is simple: there are enough antibiotics to treat the different types of infection that clinicians face. The second factor is the appearance and spread of resistant or even multidrug-resistant bacteria. For a long time, this situation remained rather confidential, almost anecdotal. It was not until the end of the 1980s that awareness emerged. It was the time of Vancomycin-Resistance Enterococci (VRE), and the threat of Vancomycin-Resistant MRSA (Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus). After this, there has been renewed interest but only in anti-Gram positive antibacterials. Today, the threat is GNB, and we have no new molecules with innovative mechanism of action to fight effectively against these bugs. However, the war against antimicrobial resistance is not lost. We must continue the fight, which requires a better knowledge of the mechanisms of action of anti-infectious agents and concomitantly the mechanisms of resistance of infectious agents. | 2019 | 31470632 |
| 9790 | 13 | 0.9999 | Emerging antibiotic resistance: carbapenemase-producing enterobacteria. Bad new bugs, still no new drugs. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a global health security threat requiring actions across government sectors and society. Many factors are involved in this phenomenon, being overuse of antibiotics, incorrect antibiotic prophylaxis, and use of antibiotics for zootechnic reasons the main causes of the increasing rate of multi-drug resistant (MDR) bacteria. The impact of resistance to antimicrobials is an important threat due also to the emergence of MDR Gram-negative bacteria resistant to carbapenems, and the lack of the research for new active molecules. The production of extended spectrum beta-lactamase enzymes has been the first threatening mechanism for Gram-negative resistance to antibiotics, which prompted the development of new classes of antibiotics such as carbapenems. Unfortunately, resistance to carbapenems developed because of multiple mechanisms including efflux pumps, porin mutations and enzyme production, being the latter particularly relevant in terms of diffusion due to the genes located within plasmids that drive their horizontal diffusion. In this scenario, antimicrobial stewardship programs (ASP) are a mandatory resource in fighting the resistance spread. The reduction of total amount of antibiotics administration in the hospital setting and guiding prescribers in the correct administration of antibiotics for the smallest period possible, at the correct dosage, can be defined as the first goals of an ASP. Anyway, in an efficacious ASP, apart from antibiotic administration, efforts must been made in ensuring the lowest probability of spreading of MDR by efficacious measures of isolation of carriers, and by offering tools for a rapid diagnosis of viral infections avoiding the administration of unnecessary antibiotics. A continuous audit of the ASP programs and a correct assessment of the allergy to drugs such as penicillin have to complete the program. Currently, only a few options are available for patients with an infection sustained by Gram-negative MDR bacteria. All the options actually available are based on the administration of colystin, an old drug whose real efficacy is reduced due to its relevant toxicity, or on the administration of recently proposed drugs such as ceftolozane-tazobactam, ceftazidime-avibactam and meropenem-vaborbactam. All these new drugs do not have a novel mechanism of action and have limited spectrum in term of activity against MDR bacteria. In conclusion, antimicrobial resistance is a global emergence and AMP is the most powerful tool actually available. Few limited options are available to treat infections due to Carbapenem Resistant Enterobacteria. Antimicrobial molecules with true novel mechanism of action are needed to win the fight against antimicrobial resistance. | 2019 | 31846984 |
| 4294 | 14 | 0.9999 | Anaerobic infections: update on treatment considerations. Anaerobic bacteria are the predominant indigenous flora of humans and, as a result, play an important role in infections, some of which are serious with a high mortality rate. These opportunistic pathogens are frequently missed in cultures of clinical samples because of shortcomings in collection and transport procedures as well as lack of isolation and susceptibility testing of anaerobes in many clinical microbiology laboratories. Correlation of clinical failures with known antibacterial resistance of anaerobic bacteria is seldom possible. Changes in resistance over time, and the discovery and characterization of resistance determinants in anaerobic bacteria, has increased recognition of problems in empirical treatment and has even resulted in changes in treatment guidelines. This review discusses the role of anaerobic bacteria in the normal flora of humans, their involvement in different mixed infections, developments in antibacterial resistance of the most frequent anaerobic pathogens and possible new treatment options. | 2010 | 20426496 |
| 9927 | 15 | 0.9999 | Induction of beta-lactamase enzymes: clinical applications for the obstetric-gynecologic patient. The emergence of bacteria resistant to antibiotics has resulted in intensive research for new and improved beta-lactam antibiotics. Many improvements in antimicrobial agents are based on a knowledge of the mechanism responsible for resistance. This has led to the development of new extended-spectrum antibiotic compounds. However, several features have been noted since the development of extended-spectrum antibiotics, such as the rapid development of bacterial resistance, the induction of beta-lactamase enzyme activity by these stable antibiotics, failure to detect induced enzyme activity and resistance in the laboratory, and beta-lactam antagonism. The resistance of bacteria to antimicrobial agents has obvious impact on the selection of appropriate therapy against infections caused by these pathogens. Gram-negative anaerobic bacteria, such as Bacteroides fragilis and Bacteroides bivius, are organisms frequently recovered from women whose initial therapy for pelvic infection failed. The transfer of antimicrobial resistance in bacteria indicates that these organisms have a system for the spread of such resistance. Therefore determination of antimicrobial susceptibilities and prompt eradication of isolates from infected patients are necessary to delay the emergence of resistant organisms. | 1987 | 3548378 |
| 9789 | 16 | 0.9999 | Nosocomial antibiotic resistance in multiple gram-negative species: experience at one hospital with squeezing the resistance balloon at multiple sites. Increased use of antibiotics has led to the isolation of multidrug-resistant bacteria, especially in intensive care units and long-term care facilities. Resistance in specific gram-negative bacteria, including Klebsiella pneumoniae, Acinetobacter baumannii, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, is of great concern, because a growing number of reports have documented mechanisms whereby these microorganisms have become resistant to all available antibacterial agents used in therapy. Reduction in the selection of these multidrug-resistant bacteria can be accomplished by a combination of several strategies. These include having an understanding of the genetics of both innate and acquired characteristics of bacteria; knowing resistance potentials for specific antibacterials; monitoring resistance trends in bacteria designated as problematic organisms within a particular institution on a routine basis; modifying antibiotic formularies when and where needed; creating institutional education programs; and enforcing strict infection-control practices. Strategies appropriate for primary prevention of nosocomial resistance may differ from those required for control of existing epidemic or endemic resistance. | 2002 | 11797177 |
| 9801 | 17 | 0.9999 | Problems and changing patterns of resistance with gram-negative bacteria. Throughout the antibiotic era, the emergence of drug-resistant bacteria has paralleled the development of new antimicrobial agents. As a result of selection pressures and invasive techniques that prolong the lives of seriously ill hospital patients, gram-negative bacilli have become the dominant causes of nosocomial infection. These microorganisms produce a diversity of antibiotic-inactivating enzymes. Moreover, the cell envelope of gram-negative bacteria provides a series of barriers that keep antibiotics from reaching their targets. Resistance factors can be transmitted among bacteria of different genera and species, thus conferring multidrug resistance. These problems continue to challenge scientists to better understand resistance mechanisms and to develop new compounds to circumvent them. | 1985 | 3909311 |
| 4329 | 18 | 0.9999 | Bacterial resistance: new threats, new challenges. Bacterial resistance remains a major concern. Recently, genetic transfers from saprophytic, non-pathogenic, species to pathogenic S. pneumoniae and N. meningitidis have introduced multiple changes in the penicillin target molecules, leading to rapidly growing penicillin resistance. In enterobacteriaceae, a succession of minute mutations has generated new beta-lactamases with increasingly expanded spectrum, now covering practically all available beta-lactam antibiotics. Resistance emerges in the hospital environment but also, and increasingly, in the community bacteria. Widespread resistance is probably associated with antibiotic use, abuse and misuse but direct causality links are difficult to establish. In some countries as in some hospitals, unusual resistance profiles seem to correspond to unusual antibiotic practices. For meeting the resistance challenge, no simple solutions are available, but combined efforts may help. For improving the situation, the following methods can be proposed. At the world level, a better definition of appropriate antibiotic policies should be sought, together with strong education programmes on the use of antibiotics and the control of cross-infections, plus controls on the strategies used by pharmaceutical companies for promoting antibiotics. At various local levels, accurate guidelines should be adapted to each institution and there should be regularly updated formularies using scientific, and not only economic, criteria; molecular technologies for detecting subtle epidemic variations and emergence of new genes should be developed and regular information on the resistance profiles should be available to all physicians involved in the prevention and therapy of infections. | 1993 | 8149138 |
| 9799 | 19 | 0.9999 | Microbiology and drug resistance mechanisms of fully resistant pathogens. The acquisition of vancomycin resistance by Gram-positive bacteria and carbapenem resistance by Gram-negative bacteria has rendered some hospital-acquired pathogens impossible to treat. The resistance mechanisms employed are sophisticated and very difficult to overcome. Unless alternative treatment regimes are initiated soon, our inability to treat totally resistant bacteria will halt other developments in medicine. In the community, Gram-positive bacteria responsible for pneumonia could become totally resistant leading to increased mortality from this common infection, which would have a more immediate impact on our current lifestyles. | 2004 | 15451497 |