Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of macrolide.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • But by the time the UCSF team started studying USA300, community MRSA had become resistant not only to the beta-lactam family of antibiotics, but to some additional drugs as well, chiefly a drug family called macrolides that includes the common antibiotic erythromycin.

    SUPERBUG MARYN MCKENNA 2010

  • But by the time the UCSF team started studying USA300, community MRSA had become resistant not only to the beta-lactam family of antibiotics, but to some additional drugs as well, chiefly a drug family called macrolides that includes the common antibiotic erythromycin.

    SUPERBUG MARYN MCKENNA 2010

  • But by the time the UCSF team started studying USA300, community MRSA had become resistant not only to the beta-lactam family of antibiotics, but to some additional drugs as well, chiefly a drug family called macrolides that includes the common antibiotic erythromycin.

    SUPERBUG MARYN MCKENNA 2010

  • The first hurdle was getting the appropriate drugs for the infection, which had a community-MRSA resistance profile—insensitive to penicillins, cephalosporins, and macrolides, vulnerable to everything else.

    SUPERBUG MARYN MCKENNA 2010

  • By the 1990s, those strains were resistant not only to the beta-lactams, but to at least some drugs in these families as well: macrolides (erythromycin); lincosamides (clindamycin); aminoglycosides (gentamicin); fluoroquinolones (ciprofloxacin); and tetracyclines.

    SUPERBUG MARYN MCKENNA 2010

  • The first hurdle was getting the appropriate drugs for the infection, which had a community-MRSA resistance profile—insensitive to penicillins, cephalosporins, and macrolides, vulnerable to everything else.

    SUPERBUG MARYN MCKENNA 2010

  • Losing erythromycin and the other macrolides had been problematic.

    SUPERBUG MARYN MCKENNA 2010

  • They either destroyed a bacterium by ruining the integrity of its cell wall—that was how the original penicillins, the beta-lactams, vancomycin, and the cephalosporins worked—or they penetrated inside a bacterium, disrupting synthesis of DNA or RNA or proteins, which was the mechanism of macrolides, tetracyclines, fluoroquinolones, and rifampin.

    SUPERBUG MARYN MCKENNA 2010

  • They either destroyed a bacterium by ruining the integrity of its cell wall—that was how the original penicillins, the beta-lactams, vancomycin, and the cephalosporins worked—or they penetrated inside a bacterium, disrupting synthesis of DNA or RNA or proteins, which was the mechanism of macrolides, tetracyclines, fluoroquinolones, and rifampin.

    SUPERBUG MARYN MCKENNA 2010

  • They were warned to be cautious about the use of fluoroquinolones and macrolides, because resistance to them was growing.

    SUPERBUG MARYN MCKENNA 2010

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