I asked myself this question while studying Biology for my A levels...
Well, we know that the reason why bacteria become immune to antibiotics of a certain type is because one of the millions of bacteria present in the body has an advantageous allele that allows that bacteria to be immune to that specific antibiotic. That superbacteria will then survive and be reproductively more successful than the rest (which die out)and thus producing a population of bacteria that is immune to the specific antibiotic (correct me if I got my terminologies wrong here..)
And so my A levels syllabus emphasizes alot on why we need to prevent this from happening. Why we should prescribe antibiotics only when necessary and finish our doses etc. etc.
But what about other forms of medicine? I plan to become a pharmacist (though I have no idea how other drugs work-yet), so I'm interested in knowing why other medicine that are used to treat bacterial infections will eventually be irrelevant since the bacteria will soon evolve to be immune to it...or will they?
And if they don't evolve to adapt to the effects of the other medicine, why?
Thanks a bunch.
Science Question on medicine and evolution, Antibiotics and bacteria
Dec 9 2012, 12:59 PM, updated 13y ago
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