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Functionalized Nanomaterials for the Management of Microbial Infection
A Strategy to Address Microbial Drug Resistance

A detailed examination of the use of nanotechnology as an effective strategy to overcome microbial drug resistance in bacterial pathogens

Rabah Boukherroub (Edited by), Sabine Szunerits (Edited by), Djamel Drider (Edited by)

9780323416252, Elsevier Science

Hardback, published 9 January 2017

338 pages
23.4 x 19 x 2.4 cm, 1.25 kg

Functionalized Nanomaterials for the Management of Microbial Infection: A Strategy to Address Microbial Drug Resistance introduces the reader to the newly developing use of nanotechnology to combat microbial drug resistance. Excessive use of antibiotics and antimicrobial agents has produced an inexorable rise in antibiotic resistance in bacterial pathogens.

The use of nanotechnology is currently the most promising strategy to overcome microbial drug resistance. This book shows how, due to their small size, nanoparticles can surmount existing drug resistance mechanisms, including decreased uptake and increased efflux of the drug from the microbial cell, biofilm formation, and intracellular bacteria. In particular, chapters cover the use of nanoparticles to raise intracellular antimicrobial levels, thus directly targeting sites of infection and packaging multiple antimicrobial agents onto a single nanoparticle.

1. Resistance to Antibiotics and Antimicrobial Peptides: A Need of Novel Technology to Tackle This Phenomenon 2. The Role of the Food Chain in the Spread of Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) 3. Penetrating the Bacterial Biofilm: Challenges for Antimicrobial Treatment 4. Metal Nanoparticles for Microbial Infection 5. Lipid-Based Nanopharmaceuticals in Antimicrobial Therapy 6. Organic Polymeric Nanomaterials as Advanced Tools in the Fight Against Antibiotic-Resistant Infections 7. Bacteriocins and Nanotechnology 8. Graphene-Microbial Interactions

Subject Areas: Microbiology [non-medical PSG]

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