Antibiotic Resistant Bacteria

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Bacteria refer to a large domain of prokaryotic microorganisms (microscopic organisms that lack a membrane bound nucleus). They are very abundant in nature. For example, according to Christian Nordqvist (2009), a gram of soil can contain up to forty million bacterial cells. Bacterial microorganisms can be found almost anywhere and can adjust extremely well to surrounding conditions.
Not all bacteria are harmful and even play an important role in the recycling of nutrients. By recycling nutrients bacteria become a valuable resource for the human body. Large colonies of bacteria called probiotics are contained in our large intestine, where they are responsible for producing vitamins that our bodies need to survive. Even though the majority of bacteria in the body are valuable and harmless there exists another type of bacteria that has quite the opposite role. These microbes are called pathogenic bacteria. Pathogenic bacteria are the type of bacteria responsible for infections and diseases. They invade a host, reproduce, and cause the infected host harm. According to the Washington State Department of Health, Tuberculosis is one of the most common fatal diseases caused by pathogenic bacteria. It is primarily treated with a course of strong antibiotics to fight the infection. Antibiotics inhibit the growth of bacteria, and are used to treat infections. They target not only pathogenic but also probiotic bacteria. Other common ways bacteria are neutralized are by the use of disinfectants, high heat, and ultraviolet irradiation.
When bacteria no longer respond to methods of neutralization they are said to be resistant. In modern times bacterial organisms have become resistant to treatments of antibiotics. It is not as if there is only o...

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... density has led to a large amount of bacterial infections. This is due to a lack of sanitation, waste management, and access to clean water. One other driving factor is that antibiotics are not regulated, and anyone with enough money can have access to them. The overuse of these drugs has led to the discovery of bacteria with resistance to some of the most powerful antibiotics in medical science. Luckily this resistance is currently found in only harmless bacteria that are harbored in an estimated two hundred million citizens. This does not put an end to the concern. Biologists fear that the harmless bacterial may transfer genes with more deadly pathogenic bacteria. The events after a gene transfer in the right conditions could be catastrophic. Picture a deadly disease with no know medical treatment in one of the heaviest populated areas. It could only end badly.

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