Abstract

    Open Access Review Article Article ID: APRC-10-189

    Modern Didactics of Acute Pneumonia as a Side Effect of the Antibiotic Era

    Igor Klepikov*

    The widespread and uncontrolled use of antibiotics for more than eighty years, including not only medicine but also the food industry, has had a significant impact on the usual relationships between representatives of the microbiosphere that accompanies our body. For a long time, the possibility of side effects remained without due attention, giving way to attempts to maintain the original antimicrobial effect of these drugs. Currently, evidence of the consequences of antibiotic therapy has received official recognition only in the form of resistant microflora. Phenomena such as the constant change of AP pathogens and the gradual loss of antibiotics for their purpose remain unstudied. The selective nature of specialists' attention to the side effects of antibiotics is due to a decrease in their effectiveness and the desire to restore the successes of previous therapy. The latter circumstance is a consequence of the negative didactic influence of antibiotics on professional views that determine the strategy for solving the problem and require, first of all, changes following the fundamental canons of medical science and numerous facts.

    Keywords:

    Published on: Oct 10, 2024 Pages: 25-31

    Full Text PDF Full Text HTML DOI: 10.17352/aprc.000089
    CrossMark Publons Harvard Library HOLLIS Search IT Semantic Scholar Get Citation Base Search Scilit OAI-PMH ResearchGate Academic Microsoft GrowKudos Universite de Paris UW Libraries SJSU King Library SJSU King Library NUS Library McGill DET KGL BIBLiOTEK JCU Discovery Universidad De Lima WorldCat VU on WorldCat

    Indexing/Archiving

    Pinterest on APRC