Antibiotics & Painkillers (AQA GCSE Biology)
Revision Note
Written by: Lára Marie McIvor
Reviewed by: Lucy Kirkham
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Antibiotics & Painkillers
When treating a disease there are two types of medication that an individual can take:
Medicines that treat the cause of the disease – antibiotics
Medicines which treat the symptoms of the disease – eg. painkillers
Antibiotics, such as penicillin, are medicines that help to cure bacterial disease by killing infective bacteria inside the body
The use of antibiotics has greatly reduced the deaths from infections in the last century
Only certain antibiotics will work on certain diseases, however, so a doctor will prescribe different antibiotics depending on the type of infection (see Culturing Microorganisms)
It is important that specific bacteria should be treated by specific antibiotics that are known to work against them
Antibiotics work by stopping bacteria cellular processes such as the production of the cell wall – they affect processes usually only in bacteria so are not harmful to animal cells
Penicillin was the first antibiotic to be discovered and is widely used, although resistance is a problem
Antibiotics will not work against viruses, as viruses reproduce inside cells. It is difficult to develop drugs that kill viruses without also damaging the body’s tissues
Painkillers and other medicines are used to treat the symptoms of disease but do not kill pathogens (eg. ibuprofen can reduce pain and inflammation)
Antibiotic Resistance
The use of antibiotics has increased exponentially since they were first introduced in the 1930s
In that time they have saved millions of lives
The introduction of antibiotics has had one of the largest impacts on global health, shown by this example in the USA
However, since their discovery and widespread use, antibiotics have been overused and antibiotic resistance has developed in many different types of bacterial species
Bacteria, like all organisms, have random mutations in their DNA
One of these mutations may give them resistance to an antibiotic
If an organism is infected with bacteria and some of them have resistance, they are likely to survive treatment with antibiotic
The population of the resistant bacteria will increase
If the resistant strain is causing a serious infection then another antibiotic will be needed
A strain of Staphylococcus aureus has developed resistance to a powerful antibiotic methicillin, this is known as MRSA (Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus)
MRSA can infect wounds and is difficult to treat without antibiotics
Bacteria evolve rapidly as they reproduce quickly and acquire random mutations – some of which confer resistance
Preventing resistant bacteria
To reduce the number of bacteria that are becoming resistant to antibiotics:
Doctors need to avoid the overuse of antibiotics, prescribing them only when needed – they may test the bacteria first to make sure that they prescribe the correct antibiotic
Antibiotics shouldn't be used in non-serious infections that the immune system will ‘clear up’
Antibiotics shouldn't be used for viral infections
Patients need to finish the whole course of antibiotics so that all the bacteria are killed and none are left to mutate to resistant strains
Antibiotics use should be reduced in industries such as agriculture – controls are now in place to limit their use in farming
Reducing the spread of resistant strains
Good hygiene practices such as handwashing and the use of hand sanitisers have reduced the rates of resistant strains of bacteria, such as MRSA, in hospitals
The isolation of infected patients to prevent the spread of resistant strains, in particular in surgical wards where MRSA can infect surgical wounds
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