Thursday, November 7, 2019
Emerging Trends - Antibiotics essays
Emerging Trends - Antibiotics essays Throughout history, the human race has sought to cure diseases. Many methods have been attempted, some good and some bad. But, by far, nothing compares to the wonder drug: antibiotics. History repeats itself. Because of this fact, the history of bacterial infections and antibiotics is important. The term antibiotics are derived from the Greek words anti and bios, which mean against life. Antibiotics are derived from living organisms, usually bacteria or molds that kill microorganisms or inhibit their growth (Antibiotics, encarta). The use of molds to help cure infections has been used for thousands of years. The medical records from Egypt, Mesopotamia, and China note this fact. Some of these records date back to 1500 BC. Crude plant extracts, as well as, cheese mold was used for topical treatments for infections (Antibiotics, encarta). William Roberts observed, in 1874, a form of bacteria immunity. He noticed that the mold Penicillium glaucum was immune to bacteria infection. A few years later, Louis Pasteur and Jules Francois Joubert noted that anthrax bacilli failed to grow if cultures became contaminated with airborne molds (Antibiotics, encarta). However, Sir Alexander Fleming made, by far, the biggest antibiotic discovery in 1928. He discovered the first true antibiotic, penicillin. Here is how the story goes. Fleming was not the tidiest of workers. He had left a Petri dish open on his bench. It was already loaded with staphylococci (staph). Spores of fungal mould (Penicillium notatum) floated in through an open window and settled on a plate. A little time later it was covered, but for some unknown reason not put into the incubator. Fleming promptly went off on a holiday leaving it on the bench. On his return Fleming found the plate and noticed that the bacteria had not grown as they would have under normal summer conditions even outside the incubator and so, Fleming deduced they had been inhibited or killed. Later he showed...
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