Antibiotic resistance is a significant public health concern. Bacteria have evolved resistance to nearly every currently available antibiotic. Accordingly, there is a dire need to understand the common mechanisms by which bacterial populations can tolerate antibiotics towards extending their effective shelf-life. One mechanism that bacteria can use to tolerate antibiotics is the inoculum effect (IE); for a given antibiotic concentration, the initial bacterial density determines whether a population survives or goes extinct. If the initial density of the population is sufficiently high, the antibiotic is ineffective. IE has been reported for nearly all bactericidal antibiotics and bacteria. Moreover, evidence from the clinic suggests that IE...
Antibiotic resistance is on the rise throughout the world and poses an increasing risk to our health...
Bacterial growth environment strongly influences the efficacy of antibiotic treatment, with slow gro...
Antibiotics affect bacterial cell physiology at many levels. Rather than just compensating for the d...
Understanding the mechanisms by which populations of bacteria resist antibiotics has implications fo...
As we enter the post antibiotic era, antibiotic resistant bacteria pose one of the greatest challeng...
The inoculum effect (IE) refers to the decreasing efficacy of an antibiotic with increasing bacteria...
The inoculum effect (IE) refers to the decreasing efficacy of an antibiotic with increasing bacteria...
© 2019, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. Growth rate and metabolic...
Antibiotic use is so ingrained in modern healthcare and agriculture that it can be difficult to imag...
Antibiotic resistance is a global health crisis. The overuse of antibiotics to treat bacterial infec...
The continuing rise of antibiotic resistance is threatening a return to the world of pre-antibiotic ...
Bacterial antibiotic resistance is typically quantified by the mini-mum inhibitory concentration (MI...
This is the final version. Available from eLife Sciences Publications via the DOI in this record. Da...
To curb the rising threat of antimicrobial resistance, we need to understand the routes to antimicro...
For the past several decades, the success of bacterial strains in infecting their host has been esse...
Antibiotic resistance is on the rise throughout the world and poses an increasing risk to our health...
Bacterial growth environment strongly influences the efficacy of antibiotic treatment, with slow gro...
Antibiotics affect bacterial cell physiology at many levels. Rather than just compensating for the d...
Understanding the mechanisms by which populations of bacteria resist antibiotics has implications fo...
As we enter the post antibiotic era, antibiotic resistant bacteria pose one of the greatest challeng...
The inoculum effect (IE) refers to the decreasing efficacy of an antibiotic with increasing bacteria...
The inoculum effect (IE) refers to the decreasing efficacy of an antibiotic with increasing bacteria...
© 2019, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited. Growth rate and metabolic...
Antibiotic use is so ingrained in modern healthcare and agriculture that it can be difficult to imag...
Antibiotic resistance is a global health crisis. The overuse of antibiotics to treat bacterial infec...
The continuing rise of antibiotic resistance is threatening a return to the world of pre-antibiotic ...
Bacterial antibiotic resistance is typically quantified by the mini-mum inhibitory concentration (MI...
This is the final version. Available from eLife Sciences Publications via the DOI in this record. Da...
To curb the rising threat of antimicrobial resistance, we need to understand the routes to antimicro...
For the past several decades, the success of bacterial strains in infecting their host has been esse...
Antibiotic resistance is on the rise throughout the world and poses an increasing risk to our health...
Bacterial growth environment strongly influences the efficacy of antibiotic treatment, with slow gro...
Antibiotics affect bacterial cell physiology at many levels. Rather than just compensating for the d...