What are Antibiotics?
The word "antibiotics" comes from the Greek anti
("against") and bios ("life"). The noun “antibiotic” was
suggested in 1942 by Dr. Selman A. Waksman, soil microbiologist 4.
An antibiotic is a drug that kills or slows the growth of
bacteria. Antibiotics are one class of antimicrobials, a larger group which
also includes anti-viral, anti-fungal, and anti-parasitic drugs. Antibiotics
are chemicals produced by or derived from microorganisms (i.e. bugs or germs
such as bacteria and fungi). The first antibiotic was discovered by Alexander
Fleming in 1928 in a significant breakthrough for medical science. Antibiotics
are among the most frequently prescribed medications in modern medicine.
Antibiotics are used to treat many different bacterial
infections.
Antibiotics cure disease by killing or injuring bacteria. Bacteria
are simple one-celled organisms that can be found, by the billions, all around
us: on furniture and counter-tops, in the soil, and on plants and animals. They
are a natural and needed part of life. Bacteria cause disease and infection
when they are able to gain access to more vulnerable parts of our bodies and
multiply rapidly. Bacteria can infect many parts of the body: eyes, ears,
throat, sinuses, lungs, airways, skin, stomach, colon, bones, genitals.
Some antibiotics are 'bactericidal', meaning that they work
by killing bacteria. Other antibiotics are 'bacteriostatic', meaning that they
work by stopping bacteria multiplying.
Each different type of antibiotic affects different bacteria
in different ways. For example, an antibiotic might inhibit a bacterium's
ability to turn glucose into energy, or its ability to construct its cell wall.
When this happens, the bacterium dies instead of reproducing.
Some antibiotics can be used to treat a wide range of
infections and are known as 'broad-spectrum' antibiotics. Others are only
effective against a few types of bacteria and are called 'narrow-spectrum'
antibiotics.
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