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[细菌对抗生素的耐药性]

[Bacterial resistance to antibiotics].

作者信息

Moreillon P

机构信息

Département de médecine interne, CHUV, Lausanne.

出版信息

Schweiz Med Wochenschr. 1995 Jun 10;125(23):1151-61.

PMID:7597403
Abstract

50 years ago, the introduction of penicillin, followed by many other antibacterial agents, represented an often underestimated medical revolution. Indeed, until that time, bacterial infections were the prime cause of mortality, especially in children and elderly patients. The discovery of numerous new substances and their development on an industrial scale gave us the illusion that bacterial infections were all but vanquished. However, the widespread and sometimes uncontrolled use of these agents has led to the selection of bacteria resistant to practically all available antibiotics. Bacteria utilize three main resistance strategies: (1) modification of their permeability, (2) modification of target, and (3) modification of the antibiotic. Bacteria modify their permeability either by becoming impermeable to antibiotics, or by actively excreting the drug accumulated in the cell. As an alternative, they can modify the structure of the antibiotic's molecular target--usually an essential metabolic enzyme of the bacterium--and thus escape the drug's toxic effect. Lastly, they can produce enzymes capable of modifying and directly inactivating antibiotics. In addition, bacteria have evolved extremely efficient genetic transfer systems capable of exchanging and accumulating resistance genes. Some pathogens, such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and multiresistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis, have become resistant to almost all available antibiotics and there are only one or two substances still active against such organisms. Antibiotics are very precious drugs which must be administered to patients who need them. On the other hand, the development of resistance must be kept under control by a better comprehension of its mechanisms and modes of transmission and by abiding by the fundamental rules of anti-infectious chemotherapy, i.e.: (1) choose the most efficient antibiotic according to clinical and local epidemiological data, (2) target the bacteria according to the microbiological data at hand, and (3) administer the antibiotic in an adequate dose which will leave the pathogen no chance to develop resistance.

摘要

50年前,青霉素以及随后许多其他抗菌药物的问世,代表了一场常常被低估的医学革命。的确,在那之前,细菌感染一直是主要的死亡原因,尤其是在儿童和老年患者中。众多新物质的发现及其在工业规模上的研发,让我们产生了一种错觉,以为细菌感染几乎已被征服。然而,这些药物的广泛使用,有时甚至是无节制使用,导致了对几乎所有现有抗生素都具有耐药性的细菌的出现。细菌利用三种主要的耐药策略:(1)改变其通透性;(2)改变靶点;(3)改变抗生素。细菌通过两种方式改变其通透性,要么对抗生素变得不可渗透,要么主动排出细胞内积累的药物。另外,它们可以改变抗生素分子靶点的结构——通常是细菌的一种必需代谢酶——从而逃避药物的毒性作用。最后,它们可以产生能够修饰并直接使抗生素失活的酶。此外,细菌还进化出了极其高效的基因转移系统,能够交换和积累耐药基因。一些病原体,如耐甲氧西林金黄色葡萄球菌和多重耐药结核分枝杆菌,几乎对所有现有抗生素都产生了耐药性,只剩下一两种物质仍对这类病原体有效。抗生素是非常珍贵的药物,必须用于有需要的患者。另一方面,必须通过更好地理解耐药性的机制和传播方式,并遵守抗感染化疗的基本规则,来控制耐药性的发展,即:(1)根据临床和当地流行病学数据选择最有效的抗生素;(2)根据手头的微生物学数据针对细菌;(3)给予足够剂量的抗生素,使病原体没有机会产生耐药性。

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