Antibiotic Resistance, Tests for
Antibiotic resistance, tests for
Bacteria can sometimes adapt to the antibiotics used to kill them. This adaptation, which can involve structural changes or the production of enzymes that render the antibiotic useless, can make the particular bacterial species resistant to the particular antibiotic. Furthermore, a given bacterial species will usually display a spectrum of susceptibilities to antibiotics, with some antibiotics being very effective and others totally ineffective. For another bacterial species, the pattern of antibiotic sensitivity and resistance will be different. Thus, for diagnosis of an infection and for clinical decisions regarding the best treatment, tests of an organism's response to antibiotics are essential.
A standard method of testing for antibiotic resistance involves growth of the target bacteria in the presence of various concentrations of the antibiotic of interest. Typically, this test is performed in a specially designed plastic dish that can be filled with agar (a Petri plate). Contamination of the agar, which would spoil the test results, is guaranteed by the sterility of the plate and the lid that fits over the agar-containing dish. The type of agar used is essential for the validity of the tests results. Typically, Iso-Sensitest agar is used.
The hardened agar surface receives a suspension of the test bacteria, which is then spread out evenly over the surface of the agar. The intention is to form a so-called lawn of organisms as growth occurs. Also on the agar surface are discs of an absorbent material. A plate is large enough to house six discs. Each disc has been soaked in a known and different concentration of the same or of different antibiotics.
As growth of the bacteria occurs, antibiotic diffuses out from each disc into the agar. If the concentration of the antibiotic is lethal, no growth of the bacteria will occur. Finally, the diffusing antibiotic will be below lethal concentration, so that growth of bacteria can occur. The result is a ring of no growth around a disc. From comparison with known standards, the diameter of the growth inhibition ring will indicate whether the bacteria are resistant to the antibiotic.
Automated plate readers are available that will scan the plates, measure the diameter of the growth inhibition zones and consult a standard database to indicate the antibiotic resistance or susceptibility of the sample bacteria.
In the past 15 years, the use of fluorescent indicators has become popular. A myriad of compounds are available that will fluoresce under illumination of specific wavelengths. Among the uses for the fluorescent compounds is the viability
of a bacterium. For example, living bacteria will fluoresce in the presence of acridine orange , while dead bacteria will not. These probes combined with the optical technique of confocal laser microscopy, now enables populations of cells to be viewed without disrupting them to see if they fluoresce or not in the presence of an antibiotic of interest.
The ability of living bacteria to fluoresce can also be exploited by another machine called a flow cytometer. This machine operates essentially by forcing a suspension of bacteria (or other cells) through an opening so that only one bacterium at a time passes by a sensor. The sensor monitors each passing bacterium and can sort these into categories, in this case, fluorescing (living) from non-fluorescing (dead). The entire process can be completely quickly. This provides an almost "real-time" assessment of the proportion of a population that has been killed by an antibiotic. If the proportion of dead bacteria is low, resistance is indicated.
All the assessments of antibiotic effectiveness need to be done in a controlled manner. This necessitates the use of standard test types of bacteria (strains that are known to be resistant to the particular antibiotic as well as other strains that are known to be sensitive to the antibiotic). The concentration of the bacteria used is also important. Too many bacteria can "dilute" out the antibiotic, producing a false indication of resistance. Controls need to be included to verify that the experiment was not subject to contamination, otherwise the possibility that a finding of resistance was due to a contaminating bacteria could not be discounted.
In clinical settings, a finding of resistance would prompt the search for another antibiotic. Often, identification of the bacteria will suggest, from previous documented tests of others, an antibiotic to which the organism will be susceptible. But, increasingly, formerly effective antibiotics are losing their potency as bacteria acquire resistance to them. Thus, tests of antibiotic resistance grow in importance.
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Cycle: Oenone wants early wood over rivals
Newspaper article from: AAP Sports News (Australia); 1/11/2008; 652 words
; AAP Sports News (Australia) 01-11-2008 Cycle: Oenone wants early wood over rivals By Roger Vaughan BALLARAT...Like any competitor in the women's road race tomorrow, Oenone Wood would dearly love to win the national champion's jersey...
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Cyc: Factbox on Oenone Wood
Newspaper article from: AAP General News (Australia); 8/7/2008; 175 words
; AAP General News (Australia) 08-07-2008 Cyc: Factbox on Oenone Wood OENONE WOOD BORN: Newcastle, NSW Sept 24 1980 HEIGHT: 158cm WEIGHT: 55kg OLYMPICS: Athens 2004 4th road race, 6th...
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Sink or swim; Teaching in an inner city school can be tough for a young graduate. Shereen Low talks to one woman who wrote about her experiences.(Features)
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 8/31/2009; 700+ words
; ...had six weeks' basic training. When Oenone Crossley-Holland joined an all-girls...aged 26, it was a case of sink or swim. Oenone, who has diarised her experiences in...I'd also have to deal with people. Oenone explains that it's the "thousand of...
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Country & Garden: A city garden, the urban answer Workshop: to continue our latest series, Anna Pavord plans a garden to appeal to adults and children
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 11/28/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...before, but I am very keen to learn." Oenone Dale, her husband Ashley and two-year...which create a surprisingly leafy oasis. Oenone is clear about what she wants from the...brick of the house and boundary walls. Oenone's first thought was to make a decked...
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In Mirren's Court, a 'Phedre' Most Sovereign; Exteriors Are Splendid, Psychic Interiors Sublime
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 9/19/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...nurse and lifelong maternal surrogate, Oenone, but also by the dynamic Dominic Cooper...discover step by methodical step the depth of Oenone's resourcefulness. In the delicate...a false report of the king's death, Oenone plants in the ear of Phedre, so racked...
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Cyc: Wood reinforced with steel
Newspaper article from: AAP Sports News (Australia); 6/10/2008; 700+ words
; ...Olympians in the lead-up to Beijing) Oenone Wood is one of the favourites to win the...Senior Sports Writer SYDNEY, AAP - Oenone Wood has a lifelong habit of taking the...little different, but when you talk to Oenone Wood you can't help but be struck by...
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Less is more for 'Phedre'.
Magazine article from: Daily Variety; 6/15/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...me" frets Phedre's overzealous nurse Oenone (crabby and vengeful Margaret Tyzack...almost every pronouncement she makes, Oenone misjudges the situation. Phedre is neither...possibility of exposure and egged on by Oenone, Phedre ratchets up the agony by falsely...
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Cycle: Aussies impress without success
Newspaper article from: AAP Sports News (Australia); 2/26/2006; 612 words
; ...Vic, Feb 26 AAP - Australian cyclists Oenone Wood and Kate Bates did everything but...also finished in the lead group. "With Oenone and I, we had two cards to play because...hill," Bates said. "Ina had to chase Oenone and lost her wheel (on the hill), but...
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Cycle: Wood happy to do it again
Newspaper article from: AAP Sports News (Australia); 10/1/2004; 548 words
; ...to let a team-mate take the glory, Oenone Wood doesn't feel as if she is owed...out there and race and do my best. "Oenone and I will be there toward the end of...Saturday, the job will be mine, but if Oenone has better legs than me, the job will...
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Oly: Australia's women lead Olympic gold rush
Newspaper article from: AAP General News (Australia); 8/16/2004; 700+ words
; ...selflessness of fourth-placed teammate Oenone Wood. The public is often unaware of...after agreeing with more favoured teammate Oenone Wood that she should make an early break...said Carrigan. "It could have been Oenone Wood if it would have been a bunch sprint...
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Edith Anna OEnone Somerville
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Edith Anna OEnone Somerville Edith Anna OEnone Somerville (1858-1949), who in collaboration with her cousin...Colonel Thomas Henry Somerville, was stationed, Edith Anna OEnone Somerville returned by the age of one to Ireland, where she...
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Oenone
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Oenone , in Greek mythology, nymph skilled in the art of healing. Paris loved her but later deserted her for Helen. Oenone, in revenge, sent their son, Corythus, to guide the Greeks to Troy. When Paris lay mortally wounded, he asked her...
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Paris
Book article from: Myths and Legends of the World
...handsome young man. In time he married Oenone, a mountain nymph, and lived with her...their revenge. Paris abandoned his wife, Oenone, and went to Sparta. King Menelaus welcomed...the battlefield and taken to his wife, Oenone, who had the gift of healing. Angry...
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Nymphs
Book article from: Myths and Legends of the World
...nymph who gained mythic status as a wife was Oenone. Married to Paris, prince of Troy, Oenone predicted that if Paris left on a journey to...Troy. When Paris lay wounded from fighting, Oenone refused to help him, even though she had the...
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Tennyson, Alfred, first Baron Tennyson
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
...he published a further volume of Poems (dated 1833), which included ‘The Two Voices’, ‘Oenone’, ‘The Lotos-Eaters’, and ‘A Dream of Fair Women’; ‘ Tithonus...
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