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New Wave of Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria

reporter writes "New strains of 'Gram-negative' bacteria have become resistant to all safe antibiotics. Though methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is the best-known antibiotic-resistant germ, the new class of resistant bacteria could be more dangerous still. 'The bacteria, classified as Gram-negative because of their reaction to the so-called Gram stain test, can cause severe pneumonia and infections of the urinary tract, bloodstream, and other parts of the body. Their cell structure makes them more difficult to attack with antibiotics than Gram-positive organisms like MRSA.' The only antibiotics — colistin and polymyxin B — that still have efficacy against Gram-negative bacteria produce dangerous side effects: kidney damage and nerve damage. Patients who are infected with Gram-negative bacteria must make the unsavory choice between life with kidney damage or death with intact kidneys. Recently, some new strains of Gram-negative bacteria have shown resistance against even colistin and polymyxin B. Infection with these new strains typically means death for the patient."

40 of 404 comments (clear)

  1. Idea by shentino · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Stop wasting all those antibiotics on beefing up our cattle and giving a bunch of supergerms a tolerance for the stuff?

    1. Re:Idea by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, it's obvious that we need even less government regulation so that the free market can allow doctors and sick patients to reach stable equilibrium with the bacterial hordes! There's a basic game theory model that proves my position!!!

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    2. Re:Idea by Xenkar · · Score: 4, Informative

      They wouldn't need to use antibiotics on our cattle if we just fed them grasses instead of corn feed.

      Unfortunately corn feed and antibiotics is cheaper than feeding them grasses.

    3. Re:Idea by maxume · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Assuming they delay the process by a decade, 200,000-300,000 in the U.S., but that is assuming that all of those people are otherwise healthy.

      That's more than AIDs but less than car accidents (and a hilarious footnote compared to heart disease and cancer).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    4. Re:Idea by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It actually works: the resistance is basically the production of some proteins. These cost energy to produce.

      Bacteria without the protection will out-compete those with the protection, in the absence of antibiotics: the latter require less energy to live and reproduce.

    5. Re:Idea by Bowling+Moses · · Score: 5, Informative

      It wasn't the Mayo Clinic and they have this to say: "Oil of oregano has received a great deal of attention, with proponents claiming it can treat a variety of illnesses, including sinus disorders. Like many spices, oregano does have some antibacterial and antifungal properties — making it at least plausible that it might help or prevent some sinus problems caused by bacteria and fungi. Unfortunately, there have been no published trials that have looked at oil of oregano specifically for this use. For this reason, it isn't known what role, if any, oil of oregano plays in treating or preventing sinusitis." Or at least that's James T. Li, M.D., Mayo clinic asthma and allergy specialist has to say on the Clinic's webpage. Current as of Aug 29, 2009.

      As for the crack about big pharma, bullshit. Traditional treatments have attracted a lot of investigation for the last couple of decades. If (if!) you find out that the traditional treatment works, then you can isolated the active compound(s) and patent and sell that.

    6. Re:Idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm horrified that you achieved +4 insightful instead of the +5 funny that you were going for.

    7. Re:Idea by sjames · · Score: 4, Informative

      I don't know about the new organisms, but the older resistant strains DO spend considerable metabolic energy on their resistance, either producing enzymes that have no other purpose or supporting active pumps on their membranes to remove the antibiotics that get in. In either case, in an environment free of the antibiotics, the resistant strains waste energy for no benefit.

    8. Re:Idea by rjh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Are you a sociopath? Or do you just go about your life assuming that other people are sociopaths, even when you haven't met them and don't know anything about them?

      The current best-of-breed treatment for cystic fibrosis involves having the afflicted person breathe a saline mist for a few hours a day. This has been peer-reviewed and has been found widely effective. It's even been reported in the science section of CNN, among other places.

      It's true that Big Pharma isn't pushing this -- but it's notable that (a) this treatment is much more effective and much cheaper than what came before it, and (b) nobody tried to prevent it from getting published. (Quite the opposite, in fact: this thing got published far and wide and fast.)

      Want to know why? Because there are people in Big Pharma who have kids with cystic fibrosis. Just like there are people in Big Pharma who have family members with cancer or HIV/AIDS, or emphysema.

      Big Pharma wants you to live. Big Pharma wants you to live both for human reasons (the human beings in the company have human compassion for suffering and sickness) and financial reasons (once you're dead, you no longer get sick, which means you no longer need their services). If a doctor talks to a Big Pharma rep and says, "hey, I've got a six year old kid whose lungs are shot from cystic fibrosis, what can you do to help?", the Big Pharma rep will probably talk all about their expensive treatments and how good they are ... and then, off the record, will tell the doctor about the New England Journal of Medicine article that covers saline treatments for CF. Because being a Big Pharma rep is a job... but that rep might also be a father or a mother, and I can't imagine a parent who would stand by and let a little kid live in misery when a cheap and effective treatment exists.

      This meme of "Big Pharma wants to kill you so that they can boost their stock price" is insulting. It has taken root only because popular culture has demonized Big Pharma so badly that a disturbing number of people will believe anything unflattering said about them, even if what they're being accused of doing runs counter to their own short- and long-term interests, to say nothing of their humanity.

    9. Re:Idea by tuxgeek · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Considering that the old new class of designer antimicrobials that your company developed for the handsoap market .. contributed to creation of this new designer bug strain ... your optimism isn't giving me a warm fuzzy feeling right now

      --
      "Suppose you were an idiot...and suppose you were a member of Congress...but I repeat myself." Mark Twain
    10. Re:Idea by zill · · Score: 5, Funny

      This is mother-in-law we're talking about here.

    11. Re:Idea by mspohr · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I think you are missing the point. The problem is not a lack of new fancy antibiotics. The problem is the overuse and misuse of the antibiotics that we already have.

      Antibiotic resistance develops when you have widespread use of antibiotics. Currently antibiotics are used widely by corporate farms (chickens are commonly fed antibiotics, etc.). This creates resistant bacteria. Basic evolution. (You can also reverse this by stopping the use of antibiotics and the bacteria will usually lose their resistance.) Antibiotics are also overprescribed for viral respiratory infections where they have no effect.

      Fix these problems and we won't need your expensive designer antibiotics (which will become useless in a few years anyway).

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
  2. Thanks by complacence · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Great. A big thank-you to all the knee-jerk antibiotics prescribers and disinfectant abusers.

    1. Re:Thanks by samurphy21 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sanitizers that lyse microbes with high doses of ethanol don't contribute to these antibiotic resistant critters, but over prescribing antibiotics definitely does.

      However, a major player is also the improper use of properly prescribed antibiotics. People who stop taking their medicine for strep as soon as they feel better instead of completing the course, as is required.

      This isn't entirely upon the doctors, but also upon those of us who don't follow doctors' directions.

    2. Re:Thanks by complacence · · Score: 5, Informative

      "Only" lab experiments, but this shows the problem is not as simple.

      P. aeruginosa, responsible for one-in-10 hospital-acquired infections, is a so-called "opportunistic" bacteria that attacks people with weakened immune systems.

      In laboratory experiments, researchers showed that the bug can rapidly mutate, building resistance to progressively higher doses of a disinfectant known as BSK, or benzalkonium chloride.

      Safe for humans, BSK is widely-used in cleaning and disinfecting products to kill bacteria, fungi and algae.

      [...]

      "We found that in both cases -- for the disinfectant and the antibiotic -- the [mutated] bacteria was taking them in, but expelling them just as quickly. It would be like trying to pump air into a bicycle tire with a huge hole in it[.]"

      (Disinfectants may boost growth of superbugs: study)

      I guess, like samurphy21 says, the only way to be sure is to nuke them from^W^W^W use a high-ethanol concentration.

  3. Death with intact kidneys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'd really be pissed if that happened to me.

  4. Life lesson by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 4, Informative

    And this, children, is why you always, always complete the full course of antibiotic treatment, even if you think the problem's cleared up half-way through. If you stop early you leave the small subset of bugs, not enough to cause a visible problem, that are the most resistant to the antibiotics. Lather rinse repeat a few times and you end up with bugs that laugh at antibiotics and proceed to run rampant.

  5. What about a natural bacterial predator? by insitus · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Anyone remember Phage Therapy?

    1. Re:What about a natural bacterial predator? by morty_vikka · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nice idea, but phage are also very good at facilitating horizontal gene transfer, so there's a chance they could make the problem worse by conferring resistance to other strains of related bacteria.

  6. The slashdot post is kinda funny... by joocemann · · Score: 4, Informative

    The language of the slashdot post seems to suggest that the presence of gram negative bacteria is recent. It also suggests that the gram negative characteristic of the bacteria is the definitive characteristic of its virulence. Also, the Gram test isn't a 'so called' test, which somehow suggests or implies doubt.

    The test has been done for decades; our knowledge of the two major types of bacteria (gram positive and gram negative) has been around for decades as well. And while gram negativity is characteristic of bacteria that must be approached with different antibiotic means than gram positive, due to their extracellular topology/materials, it does not mean that being gram negative makes the microbes virulent or specifically dangerous.

    And to debunk the loose implication that gram negativity might have evolved from human antibiotic applications I will say this: it didn't.

    General Bacteriology ftmfw.

    1. Re:The slashdot post is kinda funny... by BigDukeSix · · Score: 5, Informative

      While TFS is indeed inflammatory, your post is factually incorrect. Specifically, gram negative bacteria are very much more virulent than gram positive bacteria (or, for that matter, organisms that don't gram stain at all). The gram negatives are the only class of bacteria that express lipopolysaccharide endotoxin. The human immune system has specific receptors (like CD14) for this toxin, resulting in an extreme inflammatory response which is the pre-death phenomenon called 'sepsis'.

      We saw these pathogens emerge in our ICU three years ago and have been using colistin. The side effects are real but not nearly as common with modern supportive care as they were 40 years ago. Which is good, because when the colistin quits working, well, your patient is dead. Currently these pathogens only emerge after many weeks of critical illness and multiple runs of strong intravenous antibiotics.

      We go through fairly draconian measures to limit any spread of these organisms, which so far seem to work. Negative pressure rooms, isolation gowns and masks for simply entering the room, disposable stethoscopes, etc. all help. Rooms and gear are disinfected by two different individuals so that personal tendencies don't allow transmission. And we wash our hands. A lot.

  7. Party like it's 1899 by mdf356 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Welcome back to the world before antibiotics were discovered.

    However, a few decades of not using antibiotics at all and the bacteria around the world will again mostly be susceptible to the more common, low-risk ones. The mutations that make for antibiotic resistance have negative effects on bacteria's ability to reproduce... except in an environment with significant antibiotic use.

    --
    Terrorist, bomb, al Qaeda, nuclear, yellowcake, kill, assassinate. Carnivore is dead... long live Echelon.
    1. Re:Party like it's 1899 by F�an�ro · · Score: 4, Insightful

      However, a few decades of not using antibiotics at all and the bacteria around the world will again mostly be susceptible to the more common, low-risk ones. The mutations that make for antibiotic resistance have negative effects on bacteria's ability to reproduce... except in an environment with significant antibiotic use.

      Immunity to antibiotics would diminish, but I imagine in many cases the neccessary genes would be only supressed or disabled, not completely removed. Plasmids integrated in an inactive part of the genome, point mutations in the promoters and stuff like that.
      If we started using antibiotics again, immunities might quickly return.

    2. Re:Party like it's 1899 by arcade · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, a few weeks/months is enough.

      Give it a year without prescribing antibiotics for anything but the most severe cases, and all the nice little antibiotics are effective again.

      Google for 'norway antibiotics' .. ( http://www.fftimes.com/node/229972 )

      --
      "Rune Kristian Viken" - http://www.nwo.no - arca
  8. Taking Kidneys offline by DigiShaman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Would it be possible to at least take one (or both) Kidneys offline? Basically, run your body through a dialysis machine during the antibiotic procedure. Of course, this would have to be an extreme life or death situation to consider the possibility.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
    1. Re:Taking Kidneys offline by tpjunkie · · Score: 4, Informative

      Not really. The method of damage here is due to filtration of the active antibiotic from the blood at the glomerulus. In order to spare the kidneys here, you'd need to bypass the renal arteries, which receive about 20% of the body's blood flow. Thats not even getting into the fact that you need kidney perfusion to maintain proper blood volume. I am a med student studying on renal physiology (test on friday...)

    2. Re:Taking Kidneys offline by Nadaka · · Score: 4, Funny

      Congratulations, you just wrote the next episode of House.

    3. Re:Taking Kidneys offline by timnbron · · Score: 5, Funny

      I am a med student studying on renal physiology (test on friday...)

      Let me know if you pass, then I'll mod you up.

      --
      There are some who call me ... Tim.
    4. Re:Taking Kidneys offline by quantumghost · · Score: 5, Informative

      Theoretically yes. It would just take rerouting the incoming kidney blood supply into a loop to bypass it into dialysis. However, you would likely have to filter the drugs out, pass it back to the kidney, reroute it out again and restore the drug. Wouldn't help if your kidneys died from lack of blood supply. Last case scenario stuff probably though.

      While the idea sounds like a good idea on paper, I have to tell you, as a practicing surgeon, it really sucks.

      First let me clear up, the antibiotics themselves are either directly nephrotoxic (damage the kidneys) or their breakdown products are. Its not a matter of taking the kidneys “off-line”. And in addition not all drugs are removed with dialysis.

      To access both renal arteries and veins (assuming normal anatomy many people have duplicated renal vascular systems) is not an benign undertaking. The vessels are in the retroperitoneum (behind all the structures in the "classic" abdominal cavity. So it is not a "trivial" procedure. Next to totally bypass the kidneys is not a great idea...extended bypass systems tend to cause a lot of damage to the blood, they can speed up the drestructiong of red cells (oxygen carrying) and platelets (clotting cells). The circuit also tends to active the clotting system and you get a paradoxical, hyper/hypo-coagulable state. This is similar to DIC (Disseminated intravascular coagulation) [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disseminated_intravascular_coagulation]

      Also the bypass circuit itself is made of synthetic material with acts to harbor bacteria. Given large scale infections, we as surgeon, routinely remove all sorts of prosthetics (AV graft material used for dialysis, artificially heart valves, pacemakers, rods and screws from orthopedic procedures)

      The information in the article itself is not new. When I did a rotation in a burn unit in 2004, we had a standing problem with the unit harboring several species of Acinetobacter, and these organisms were resistant to all the antibiotics that the lab routinely tested. We routinely had to use Imipenem(tm) [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imipenem]. And it was not unusual to have bugs start to build resistance to that drug. We usually had to resort to poly-pharmacy as opposed to mono-therapy as we usually prefer.

      Again as I posted a few weeks ago: As physicians we need to be vigilant in our use of antibiotics, but patients need to be respectful of them as well and to stop asking for an antibiotic (that is useless for viral infections) for every little sniffle when you have the common cold or flu (both caused by viruses).

      Forgive me for quoting wikipedia, but I felt some footnotes were warrented. I usually yell at my students and residents when they quote it to me, but for the level of discussion here, it is adequate.

    5. Re:Taking Kidneys offline by quantumghost · · Score: 4, Informative
      I, as I have stated, am a surgeon and not a nephrologist...so I have less direct knowledge of the exacting details....but as I understand it:

      [hemo] dialysis is using a counter current "dialysate" to effect a net removal of solvent and solute from the blood...aka accomplishing a filtration the way a kidney works by using a semi-permeable membrane. Can also be done via a process of peritoneal dialysis using a catheter inserted into the abdominal cavity.

      plasmaphoresis is the process of removing the plasma from the body and replacing it with albumin or other colloid solution (fresh frozen plasma). This is used to reduce the immune components of the blood e.g. antibodies. Most commonly used for auto-immune disorders.

      lukopheresis is selectively removing the white cells from blood. This is mostly commonly used in packed red cells used in transfusions.

      The latter two procedures would be contraindicated in the face of a bacterial infection as they would severely inhibit the immune function of the body.

  9. Moving into the pre-antibiotic era by anoopsinha · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I'm a clinical microbiologist working in a teaching hospital in India. We've been seeing multi-drug resistant strains of hospital bugs (Gram negative) for quite some time now.

    In fact, more than 60% of the Gram negative isolates in our hospital (in-patients) appear to be producing an enzyme called extended spectrum beta lactamases (ESBL). These ESBL-strains are often resistant to other classes of antibiotics as well, narrowing therapeutic options. In a subset of cases, these bugs turn up as resistant to almost all the antibiotics we test.

    But, I am yet to come across a case where the isolate was resistant to colistin and polymyxin B. No clinician would even think of using these drugs if other options are available. But, if, as the article reports, these organisms turn out to be resistant to even these last-resort drug... we can safely assume that we are in deep shit.

  10. Ever been on a farm? by rjh · · Score: 4, Informative

    My family raises cattle on a farm in Iowa. Speaking from our experience, I'll tell you that putting a pound of meat on a steer takes in the neighborhood of ten pounds of feed -- and much more than that, if you're feeding them exclusively grasses (including hay).

    So. Take a hundred head of cattle and turn them loose on a hundred acres of land. These animals are still growing (since, when they're ready for the slaughterhouse, well... they get taken to the slaughterhouse). If we want to put a hundred pounds on each steer, then that means each steer needs half a ton of feed.

    Good luck getting 50 tons of grass from a hundred acres of land. It's not going to happen. The farmer has two choices at this point: raise fewer cattle (and thus raise meat prices for the consumer), or convert some of the cornfields into pasture (and thus raise grain prices for the consumer).

    Either way you're talking about raising the prices of basic foodstuffs. You won't inconvenience the rich: the rich will still be able to afford filet mignon and Kobe beef. After all, they're rich.

    But the elderly, who live on fixed incomes... poor families who depend on food stamps... or just a college student burdened with debt who wants to be able to take his girlfriend to a steakhouse for a special occasion... all of these people are seriously impacted.

    The name of the game in modern farming is efficiency. Reducing prices is the overall goal.

    1. Re:Ever been on a farm? by rjh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So, what you're saying is that if you drive to the farm yourself, cut out all the middlemen who are involved in distributing food to grocery stores and coops, etc., then you can buy beef that's reasonably priced (but still above market rates). And if for some reason you can't, then you have to buy from a co-op and pay substantially above-market rates.

      You apparently live close enough to a small farm that you can cut out the middleman like this. Most Americans don't. Most Americans live in metropolitan areas and are dozens of miles away from the nearest small family farm. To someone living in a metro area like D.C., going out to a family farm is easily a two- or three-hour round trip. The opportunity costs there jack the $4.75 price up substantially more. You aren't just paying $4.75 per pound at that rate -- you're giving up a substantial chunk of your weekend, too.

      Don't make the mistake of thinking that just because something works for you, that it will scale up to work for a nation of millions.

    2. Re:Ever been on a farm? by pushf+popf · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But the elderly, who live on fixed incomes... poor families who depend on food stamps... or just a college student burdened with debt who wants to be able to take his girlfriend to a steakhouse for a special occasion... all of these people are seriously impacted.

      Americans who can't afford beef can do the same thing the rest of the world does (at least those parts of the world that aren't starving). Eat something else.

      Chicken is cheaper than beef, eggs are cheaper than chicken, and rice and beans is cheaper still. The cost of one dinner at a steakhouse for two will buy a huge sack of rice and huge sack of beans, including a bunch of stuff to make it taste good. This will easily last a month, even for a family.

    3. Re:Ever been on a farm? by lawpoop · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If we want to put a hundred pounds on each steer, then that means each steer needs half a ton of feed.

      But the elderly, who live on fixed incomes... poor families who depend on food stamps... or just a college student burdened with debt who wants to be able to take his girlfriend to a steakhouse for a special occasion... all of these people are seriously impacted.

      This is why you just eat some vegetarian food. I love a good steak as much as the next guy, but at this point, it seems that the economic/ecological arguments win out. What a waste of societies' resources to turn 1.5 tons of food into 100 pounds of food.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    4. Re:Ever been on a farm? by rjh · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You will be free to continue using expensive antibiotics on your farm...

      We raise antibiotic-free beef. Grain-fed, but no chemicals. You generally don't need antibiotics for free-range beef. Antibiotics are needed when you're doing large-scale industrial farming where the cattle are packed together like sardines and an infection in one animal quickly spreads throughout the barn like wildfire.

      We give our animals room to roam. We do it for humane reasons -- we think it's inhumane to put an animal in a pen and never allow it to leave. I don't know any family-run farm operations that raise cattle in pens: free-ranging is almost an article of faith among us.

      You are not the first person to assume that I'm in favor of putting antibiotics in beef. I'm not. I'm in favor of free-ranging them because I think it's required by the decency standards of animal husbandry.

      I am also in favor of grain-fed animals, because we simply cannot produce beef in the amount demanded by the market without it.

    5. Re:Ever been on a farm? by codegen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I was raised in rural Saskatchewan and worked on a farm many times. While what you say about field yields is true, overuse of antibiotics in farming harms all of us. Those people you identify: elderly, poor families or college students now have to face even higher medical bills when they catch antibiotic resistant bacteria. There was a story a couple of years ago about the FDA clearing some of the last chance antibiotics for agricultural use. This story may or may not be related, but the quantities used when treating farm animals and the discharge of the antibiotics into the environment only put the rest of us at risk.

      --
      Atlas stands on the earth and carries the celestial sphere on his shoulders.
  11. Stop blindly proscribing antibiotics by Bhrian · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When visiting a doctor for a sinus infection, he said that in India they would take a swab from my nose, determine in a few minutes with a microscope what bacteria was bothering me, and give me a specific antibiotic that was known to work well.

    In the USA, he said insurance tells them to just proscribe an antibiotic and if it doesn't work, they'll come back. The ten minutes of lab work isn't covered by insurance, so they don't do it. I asked if I could pay cash for the test with the microscope, but he refused and said he'd get in trouble.

    Most doctors follow insurance rules, worry about liability, and treat symptoms, in that order.

  12. Phage therapy: Where communism succeeded.. by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 4, Informative

    "The programme revealed that we - ie humankind - had discovered a superior cure (to antibiotics) for bacterial infections around the same time that penicillin was being discovered. The research programme on bacteriophages (phages for short) began in Stalin's Georgia in the 1930s. To this day, our knowledge of each of the many thousands of phage viruses remains concentrated in a now rundown laboratory in Tbilisi, Georgia. The arrival of capitalism in the Caucuses threatens a repository of knowledge, built up over 50 years, that could prevent the superbug pandemic that threatens us all next century. ...
        While there are some genuine reasons why phage treatments of bacterial diseases were overlooked in the 1930s and 1940s, the failure to develop a western research program into bacteriophage treatment in the 1980s and 1990s represents an inexcusable failure of western capitalism. By the 1980s, ther e could be no denial that antibiotic resistance was going to be a major problem in (if not before) the twentyfirst century. Yet, we just didn't want to know about what will probably turn out to be the most important medical breakthrough in the twentieth century; a breakthrough made in communist G eorgia, in Stalin's Soviet Union.
        It is embarrassing when western science is out-trumped, especially by the "communists". Usually, when out-trumped, we don't tell anyone. That's what happened here. Not only did we not have the nous to start a western programme in bacteriophage research; we looked the other way when the files of phials threatened to be destroyed following the breakup of the Soviet Union, and during the little reported civil war that engulfed Georgia a few years ago. So much for the knowledge economies of the west. How can such valuable knowledge be so cheap?
          It's not too late for western medicine to enter the post-antibiotic bacteriophage era. Our grandchildren will hardly thank us if we persevere with our corporate-profit-motivated conservatism.
        The Soviets were able, eventually, to admit that they were wrong to follow Lysenko. Will we in the west be equally able to admit that we were wrong to put all our medical eggs into the one antibiotic basket, in the process ignoring the most basic tenets of the theory of evolution?
    """
      From:
        http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL9910/S00096.htm

    (I'm glad to see several people have posted links to phage therapy information.)

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.