Antibacterial Chemotherapy: Theory, Problems, and Practice (Oxford Infectious Diseases Library Series)






Although antibiotics are among the most widely used pharmaceuticals, they are also often inappropriately and over-prescribed. Indeed there are increasing predictions that unless we moderate our use of these drugs, bacterial resistance will eventually render them useless. As there are no serious contenders to take the place of antibiotics, including a failure to find new classes of these drugs, it is essential for modern medicine that their efficacy is preserved.
Part of the Oxford Infectious Disease Library, this pocketbook is designed to help medical trainees, general prescribers, healthcare workers and students of all biological and medical sciences to understand how antibiotics work, to demonstrate where they might be most appropriate and to make clear the threat of antibiotic resistance. In particular, it will highlight the problems currently seen with bacteria such as MRSA and describe the circumstances leading to their persistence.

Book features
  • Helpful Key Points at the beginning of each chapter to summarize content.
  • Portable, accessible format for quick reference.
  • Includes up-to-date research literature that has direct clinical application for busy healthcare professionals. 

Contents
  • Antibiotic action - general principles
  • 1: Antibiotics - mechanisms of action
  • 2: Pharmacokinetics applied to antimicrobials
  • 3: Sensitivity and identification tests
  • 4: Genetics of antibiotic resistance
  • 5: Mechanisms of antibiotic resistance
  • 6: Multi-drug resistant bacteria and healthcare-acquired infections
  • 7: Multi-drug resistant bacteria and healthcare-acquired infections
  • 8: Antimycobacterium therapy
  • 9: Clinical use of antibiotics to prevent or control resistance 


Product Details 
  • Paperback: 100 pages
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA; 1 edition (May 2, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0199581363
  • ISBN-13: 978-0199581368
List Price: $24.95
 

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