I think they made medicine for stomachs from the helpful digesting helper bacteria in pills.
Antibiotics kill bacteria by recognising the antibodies secreted by the bacteria, then attach themselves to the bacteria and give out a signal calling for white blood cells (phagocytes) to eat up the bacteria. Viruses do not secrete the antibodies recognised by antibiotics as they do not resemble proper cells, therefore antibiotics cannot recognise viruses and thus they cannot be digested by phagocytes.
antibiotics should not be over used because antibiotics taken unnecessarily may kill the beneficial bacteria in the body.
antibiotics are really essential for treatment but some antibiotics cause side effects can be of any type it may be terotogenic which means you should not be given in pregnancy there are so many other type of allergic reactions are associated with antibiotics but it is necessary to give antibiotics
Antibiotics. A major contributor to ulcers is the helicobacter pylori bacteria.
Antibiotics are made using various elements and compounds derived from living organisms, such as bacteria, fungi, or synthesized chemically in laboratories. Common elements found in antibiotics include carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen. These elements are essential for building the molecular structures that give antibiotics their ability to target and kill bacteria.
It help us in many different ways like they digest our food they give us witamin K they find the bad bacteria
I'm not sure if you could specify? I just learned about antibiotics in biology this year (I'm a sophomore) and I can tell you something though: do not give antibiotics to your animals to promote growth. It is sorta like taking antibiotics when you're sick. They help you, but can be deadly. It goes the same for animals too. Antibiotics can be deadly because there are such things that may exist in our bodies called MUTANT BACTERIA STRAINS. These strains will not respond to antibiotics when the other bacteria die off. MUTANT BACTERIA STRAINS will stay alive. and worse, multiply. And then you have a whole swarm of mutant bacteria strains in your body that can't be taken away with antibiotics. So when you give certain livestock antibiotics to promote growth, you're risking possession of mutant bacteria in your body when you eat their meat. The animal may have mutant bacteria strains already and you don't know it. So when you eat the animal, you're risking getting these bacteria strains. Sorry if that didn't help, but you may have learned something vital instead.
Only antibiotics will really help. The only way to cure cholera is with time and replenishing the body fluids. The antibiotics will slow the bacteria for it to be eliminated by the white blood cells.
Patients often demand antibiotics when they have colds, flus, or other viral illnesses, even though antibiotics do nothing for these conditions. When doctors give in to these demands, they contribute to antibiotic resistance. It's important to understand how antibiotics work, and how bacteria respond to them. Each time an antibiotic is taken, bacteria respond by making adjustments in how they breed. It's much like watching a linebacker in a football game as he uses fast footwork to weave and sway to get around an opponent. As the bacteria changes how it produces, it "weaves and sways" and "goes around" the active ingredients in antibiotics. Each time a bacteria encounters that same bacteria, it now has new defenses to defeat the antibiotic. Since most antibiotics belong to "families" of antibiotics with similar properties, the defenses a bacteria creates against one antibiotic often will now defeat the entire "family" of similar antibiotics, kind of like how one football team (here a bacteria type) can defeat another football team (here a family of antibiotics). Since we need to know one or a different antibiotic will be able to defeat a certain bacteria, we need to limit how often we take any antibiotics.
They give you prescribed medicine its either a pink liquid or a ear spray.
The theory is that any time you use an antibacterial agent, you can only kill 99.99% of the bacteria, while the remaining 0.01% may be bacteria more resistant than the original. When those few remaining bacteria multiply, they may be more difficult to destroy.
If you do not give antibiotics, the plasmid may lost after a few generation. it is because bacteria thinks that the extra DNA (plasmid) is not needed as the antibiotic is not present. That is the reason for keeping the culture always in antibiotic selection pressure.