Acinetobacter baumannii, classified as priority number one by the World Health Organization (WHO), is an opportunistic pathogen responsible for infection and is able to develop antibiotic resistance easily. Membranes are bacteria's first line of defense against external aggression, such as antibiotics. A chemical modification of a lipid family or a change in lipid composition can lead to resistance to antibiotics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Antimicrobial use (AMU) is a known driver of antimicrobial resistance. Insight into prevalence and correlates of AMU can help identify health inequities and areas for targeted action. To better understand sociodemographic and medical dimensions of AMU in Canada, the Public Health Agency of Canada, in partnership with Statistics Canada, developed a Rapid Response Module questionnaire on self-reported oral antibiotic use, to be administered as part of the 2018 Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBio-based multilayer films were prepared by using the innovative nanolayer coextrusion process to produce films with a number of alternating layers varying from 3 to 2049. For the first time, a semicrystalline polymer was confined by another semicrystalline polymer by nanolayering in order to develop high barrier polyamide (PA11)/polylactic acid (PLA) films without compromising thermal stability and mechanical behavior. This process allows the preparation of nanostratified films with thin layers (down to nanometric thicknesses) in which a confinement effect can be induced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta Mol Cell Biol Lipids
October 2024
Persister cells constitute a bacterial subpopulation able to survive to high concentrations of antibiotics. This phenotype is temporary and reversible, and thus could be involved in the recurrence of infections and emergence of antibiotic resistance. To better understand how persister cells survive to such high antibiotic concentration, we examined changes in their lipid composition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Many patients undergoing surgical and other medical procedures requiring sedation or anesthesia receive standardized "no eating or drinking after midnight" instructions. This "standardized" instruction does not change regardless of potential alterations in scheduling that result in significant delays in procedure start times. As a result, the duration of preprocedure fasting often far exceeds recommended requirements.
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