Capítulo de Libro
Novel immune pharmacological approaches for the treatment of bacterial invasive infections
Título del libro: Science against microbial pathogens: communicating current research and technological advances
Fecha de publicación:
2012
Editorial:
Formatex
ISBN:
978-84-939843-1-1
Idioma:
Inglés
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
The emergency of multiresistant bacterial strains is, likely, one of the main concerns related with the clinical practice´s misuse of antimicrobial (ATM) drugs in human and veterinary medicine. Some of these bacteria are mentioned as follow: community multiresistant Staphylococcus aureus (Ca-MARSA) and, hospitalary multiresistant Staphylococcus aureus (HMARSA), Enterococcus spp. vancomycin resistant genotype vanA, Streptococcus pneumoniae beta lactams resistant and food transmission quinolones resistant Salmonella spp. The re-emergency of pathogens with difficulties to be treated by conventional ATM therapy, i.e Listeria monocytogenes, must also be having into account. The complexity of this situation in clinical practice is reflected in a therapeutic failure with poor patient response and likelihood of death risk. For this reason, new alternatives for helping the conventional ATM therapy will be described in this chapter. The actions of a novel antimicrobial peptide (AP-CECT7121) and a natural immunomodulator, both obtained from a saprophytic environmental strain, Enterococcus faecalis CECT7121 (characterized as probiotic), will here be described as new model of therapeutic strategy for helping the control of some invasive infections.
Palabras clave:
INMUNOMODULACION
,
PARED BACTERIANA
,
PEPTIDO CECT7121
,
E. FAECALIS CECT 7121
Archivos asociados
Licencia
Identificadores
Colecciones
Capítulos de libros(CIVETAN)
Capítulos de libros de CENTRO DE INVESTIGACION VETERINARIA DE TANDIL
Capítulos de libros de CENTRO DE INVESTIGACION VETERINARIA DE TANDIL
Citación
Sparo, Mónica Delfina; Sanchez Bruni, Sergio Fabian; Novel immune pharmacological approaches for the treatment of bacterial invasive infections; Formatex; 1; 2012; 135-143
Compartir