Resistant Bacteria

Resistant Bacteria - most related articles:

- Nanotechnology used to probe effectiveness of antibiotics - 7.4
- Gay men vulnerable to infectious MRSA superbug bacteria - 6.3
- New way to fight antibiotic resistant bacteria - 6.2
- Antibacterial wipes may spread bacteria - 4.9
- Poor oral hygiene, bleeding gums may cause heart disease - 4.8
- Drug resistant MRSA in livestock infects humans - 4.8
- Drug resistance TB cases rising in Europe - 4.7
- Exposure to bacteria can increase learning behavior - 3.9
- What's your intestinal bacteria type? - 3.8
- Totally drug resistant tuberculosis TDR TB reported in India - 3.6

Resistant Bacteria articles

Drug resistant MRSA in livestock infects humans
A strain of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bacteria that humans contract from livestock was originally a human strain, but it developed resistance to antibiotics once it was picked up by farm animals. The findings illustrate a very close link between antibiotic use on the farm and potentially lethal human infections.

New strain of MRSA discovered, found in both humans and dairy cows
Scientists have identified a new strain of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) which occurs both in human and dairy cow populations. The study, led by Dr Mark Holmes at the University of Cambridge, identified the new strain in milk from dairy cows while researching mastitis (a bacterial infection which occurs in the cows' udders).

New way to fight antibiotic resistant bacteria
Treating municipal wastewater solids at higher temperatures may be an effective tool in the fight against antibiotic-resistant bacteria, says researchers from the University of Minnesota's College of Science and Engineering.

Nanotechnology used to probe effectiveness of antibiotics
A group of researchers led by scientists from the London Centre for Nanotechnology, in collaboration with a University of Queensland researcher, have discovered a way of using tiny nano-probes to help understand how an antibiotic is effective against bacteria.

Gay men vulnerable to infectious MRSA superbug bacteria
Sexually active gay men are many times more likely than others to acquire a new, highly antibiotic-resistant strain of the so-called MRSA bacteria widely know as the "superbug," a UCSF-led study shows.

5 Resistant Bacteria articles listed above.


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