Even low levels of antibiotics in chicken can cause bacterial resistance

IANS  |  New York 

Even negligible levels of in chicken blood can cause bacterial resistance and sicken people with hard-to-treat infections, suggests new research based on a study of resistance in leech's gut.

resistance can develop in the environment, too, as hospitals and companies create favorable conditions for resistance by discharging large quantities of medications.

But what concentration of antibiotic exposures boost the growth of resistant microbes in the wild? The new study, published in the journal mBio, suggests the threshold is low.

The researchers found resistant thriving in leeches exposed to less than four-hundredths of a milligram, per millilitre, of ciprofloxacin, an important antibiotic, in the environment.

That level represents less than one per cent of the "clinical resistance breakpoint," or concentration in the gut that selects for resistance.

For the study, the international team of researchers took a deep dive into the microbiome of blood-sucking medicinal leeches.

They found that low levels of in the animal's environment improved the survival of antibiotic-resistant in its gut.

Those resistant bacteria, in turn, displaced healthy

The findings could help explain have been found in patients who undergo medicinal

In addition, "it suggests that contamination with very low levels of antibiotics in other environments can lead to the increase in resistant bacteria," said at the University of in the US who led the study.

--IANS

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First Published: Tue, July 24 2018. 18:10 IST