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Antibiotic resistance in bacteria arises when microorganisms evolve the ability to withstand drugs designed to kill them or inhibit their growth, rendering once-effective treatments useless. This phenomenon, driven by genetic change and selection under antibiotic exposure, poses a profound threat to modern medicine. Mechanisms include drug-inactivating enzymes (e.g., β-lactamases), efflux pumps that eject antibiotics, mutations altering antibiotic targets, decreased drug uptake, and...
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Related Experiment Video

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Nanomechanics of Drug-target Interactions and Antibacterial Resistance Detection
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Vancomycin-Variable Enterococcal Bacteremia.

M A Downing1, J Xiong2, A Eshaghi3

  • 1St. Joseph's Health Centre, Toronto, ON, Canada Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.

Journal of Clinical Microbiology
|October 2, 2015
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Vancomycin-variable enterococcus (VVE) initially seems sensitive to vancomycin but carries resistance genes. This emerging pathogen presents significant diagnostic and treatment challenges in clinical settings.

Area of Science:

  • Microbiology
  • Infectious Diseases
  • Clinical Medicine

Background:

  • Vancomycin-variable enterococcus (VVE) is an emerging multidrug-resistant pathogen.

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  • VVE isolates possess the vanA gene, conferring resistance to vancomycin.
  • These isolates initially exhibit phenotypic susceptibility to vancomycin, complicating early detection.