As antibiotic resistance continues to spread, researchers are exploring new approaches to stay ahead of the problem.
While resistance is a natural evolutionary process, the review shows that human activity has dramatically intensified its ...
Glaciers harbor both ancient and human-derived antibiotic resistance genes, preserved in ice and increasingly mobilized by ...
Staphylococcus aureus has the potential to develop durable vancomycin resistance, according to a new study. Staphylococcus aureus has the potential to develop durable vancomycin resistance, according ...
An international team of scientists, led by Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore), has discovered a new ...
Earthworms remove 70-95 percent of antibiotic resistance genes from farm manure, making safer fertilizer for crops.
Tackling antibiotic resistance likely requires a multifaceted approach. Better and faster point-of-care testing, new treatments, and antimicrobial stewardship could hold promise for future control.
The paper argues that glaciers can store antibiotic resistance genes for long periods and that climate-driven melting may ...
Researchers found that sepsis tolerance changes with age. In mice, the same pathway that protected young survivors worsened ...
Vermicomposting earthworms help turn manure into organic fertilizer, representing a potential tool against antibiotic ...