Effects of Biocides: On Antibiotic Resistance
Effects of Biocides: On Antibiotic Resistance
Effects of Biocides: On Antibiotic Resistance
org/
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Source document:
Effects of Biocides
on antibiotic resistance
SCENIHR (2009)
Summary & Details:
GreenFacts (2009)
http://www.greenfacts.org/
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This PDF Document is the Level 1 of a GreenFacts Co-Publication. GreenFacts Co-Publications are published
in several languages as questions and answers, in a copyrighted user-friendly Three-Level Structure of
increasing detail:
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4.1 Some bacteria are naturally unaffected by antimicrobial products. Other bacteria find
ways to keep their inside concentration of biocides at levels that are harmless to them,
for instance by limiting the amount that penetrates the cell or by pumping biocides out.
Some bacteria can use enzymes to alter antimicrobial products or can modify their external
envelope so that products cannot penetrate inside the cell.
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Of particular concern are bacteria that become resistant because they acquire resistance
genes from other bacteria.
4.2 Bacteria can become resistant to antibiotics as a result of spontaneous changes in their
DNA (mutations) or a gene transfer from another bacterium.
When different strains of bacteria are exposed to antibiotics, those that have resistance
genes survive while the others are killed. Over time, this can lead to the selective survival
of resistant strains, and to an increase of resistance.
Bacteria that are resistant to several classes of antibiotics at the same time (multi-drug
resistant) are often found in hospitals and are a serious cause for concern.
4.3 Antibiotics and biocides sometimes work in similar ways and different mechanisms
have enabled some bacteria to become resistant to both. This raises concerns over the
indiscriminate and often inappropriate use of biocides in situations where they are
unnecessary, because it can contribute to the development and persistence of resistance.
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Bacteria that grow as a biofilm attached to a surface are particularly able to survive hostile
conditions (physical, chemical or biological attacks) and pose a high risk of resistance to
both antibiotics and biocides.
8.2 It is very difficult to measure how effective antimicrobial products are, particularly in
real life conditions.
There is an urgent need to develop standard testing methods of measuring both biocide
and antibiotic resistance in bacterial samples, including bacteria that grow as a biofilm.
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2.
3.
the concentrations of biocides that bacteria are directly exposed to, when
they are treated with disinfectants or antiseptics, and indirectly through
contact with biocidal residues;
Biocides are a precious resource that should not be used unnecessarily. When they are
used, they should be applied in concentrations high enough to kill all the bacteria exposed
and eliminate the risk of resistance.
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