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Bacteriophage therapy-a refurbished age-old potential strategy to treat antibiotic and multidrug resistant bacterial infections in future

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dc.contributor.author Dave, Rajal
dc.contributor.author Banerjee, Debashis
dc.date.accessioned 2024-11-15T11:21:54Z
dc.date.available 2024-11-15T11:21:54Z
dc.date.issued 2024-07-01
dc.identifier.citation Dave, R., & Banerjee, D. (2024). Bacteriophage therapy-a refurbished age-old potential strategy to treat antibiotic and multidrug resistant bacterial infections in future. Brazilian Journal of Microbiology, 55(3), 3043-3049. en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://10.9.150.37:8080/dspace//handle/atmiyauni/1553
dc.description.abstract The worldwide prevalence of antimicrobial resistance coupled with the unavailability of newer antibiotics, has brought the sharp focus back among the scientific community, towards the discovery of novel alternative therapeutics to tackle the menace. Consequently, in the current post-antibiotic era, ‘Bacteriophage Therapy’ has emerged as one of the most promising option to address this problem. Bacteriophages, actually discovered long back, has shown greater potential to kill various bacterial pathogens, including the resistant clinical ones. Some of the other advantages for the use of bacteriophage therapy to treat infectious diseases include, wider availability of these microorganisms in nature, host-specific action, absence of any significant side-effects in humans and most often also exhibiting a broader anti-bacterial potential. In the recent times, the potential of phage therapy has been demonstrated in various treatments, clinical trials and infection models across the globe, where even antibiotics have completely failed. To address the global threat of AMR, WHO and UN have jointly illustrated “One Health” approach, recently extending the context to bacteriophage therapy. Many pharmaceutical companies have also recently started employing bacteriophages for developing different kinds of formulations for catering to medical and other industries. It has even shown great effect as combinatorial therapy along with antibiotics, to treat or manage various critical antibiotic resistant clinical infections. This continuously expanding potential of the bacteriophages holds great promise in the future, in the fight against the rising threat of AMR globally. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Springer Nature/ Brazilian Journal of Microbiology en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries ;55(3), 3043-3049
dc.subject Bacteriophage therapy en_US
dc.subject old potential strategy en_US
dc.subject antibiotic en_US
dc.subject multidrug resistant en_US
dc.subject bacterial infections en_US
dc.subject refurbished age en_US
dc.title Bacteriophage therapy-a refurbished age-old potential strategy to treat antibiotic and multidrug resistant bacterial infections in future en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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