Low concentrations of antibiotics
- 1 January 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
- Vol. 15 (suppl A) , 15-26
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jac/15.suppl_a.15
Abstract
Low concentrations of antibiotics have been shown to alter the morphology and infrastructure of bacteria. Exposure to β-lactam antibiotics produces large Gram-positive cocci or long filaments of Gram-negative bacilli. The ultrastructure of staphylococa in infected animals and patients treated with β-lactam antibiotics is comparable to the structure of staphylococci grown on a solid support medium such as hard agar or a filter membrane but is different from the structure of staphylococci grown in liquid media. Antibiotic-modified bacteria are phagocytosed very efficiently; considering their bacterial mass, Escherichia coli filaments are killed much more efficiently by PMNs than is an equal mass of normal sized bacilli. Antibiotics at sub-MIC alter the synthesis and excretion of bacterial metabolites which results in a change in their virulence. Antibiotics at a very low dosage, 10 mg of ampieillin per day which resulted in sub-MICs in the unne, were shown to cure unnary infections in patients. These therapeutic results were attributed to the inhibition of bacterial adherence by sub-MICs of ampicillin.Keywords
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