User login

Enter your username and password here in order to log in on the website:
Login

Forgot your password?

Please note: While some information will still be current in a year, other information may already be out of date in three months time. If you are in any doubt, please feel free to ask.

resistance

Question
Hello

I would like to know when resistance to antibiotics occurs. Is it smart to change regularly the maintenance dose?
What are the consequences of antibiotic resistance? Are there enough effective antibiotic treatments?

Thank you
Answer
This is an interesting question. To make this answer clear, we take as an example the antibiotic treatment against the Pseudomonas bacterium.
All bacteria, including Pseudomonas aeruginosa can become resistant in order to escape the 'killing' function of the antibiotics. Each bacterium develops its own way to become resistant to the antibiotics, the Pseudomonas bacterium is very good at it and can become resistant to all kinds of antibiotics in the long term.
When a doctor decides to give particular antibiotics to a CF patient, the following is usually done:
A sputum sample is put on a culture plate. That means that sputum (coughed up phlegm) is enriched with nutrients and is put in ideal conditions to promote its growth in an incubator. After a few days, groups of bacteria can be seen. The microbiologist will distinguish different bacteria the bacterium according to their specific appearance.
To test the sensitivity of bacteria to the antibiotics, discs containing different antibiotics are put around the bacteria. After a certain time the bacteria around the “sensitive (active)” antibiotics die. Bacteria that have become resistant to a specific antibiotic continue to grow despite the presence of the antibiotic. The larger the radius of “no bacteria” around the particular antibiotic, the better its activity. This information is communicated to the doctor, who then chooses the most appropriate antibiotics for the patient.

To prevent resistance to antibiotics, the following principles are applied:

- Combined antibiotics decrease the risk of resistance.
- A second advantage to mix antibiotics of different classes is that they each have a different way of working. That way, antibiotics can even strengthen the effect of each other, compared with each antibiotic alone.
- rotating the use of antibiotics, rather than giving the same one all the time, will also reduce the risk of resistance.

Fortunately, in patients with CF, we usually still obtain good clinical improvement even when the germs are resistant to antibiotics. That is why in several centers abroad resistance determination is no longer done routinely.

I hope this answer is of use to you
Sincerely,

Lien De Somer-Kris De Boeck-Elke Dewachter

14.11.2012