Phage Therapy in Clinical Practice: Treatment of Human Infections
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Abstract
Phage therapy is the application of bacteria-specific viruses with the goal of reducing or eliminating pathogenic or nuisance bacteria. While phage therapy has become a broadly relevant technology, including veterinary, agricultural, and food microbiology applications, it is for the treatment or prevention of human infections that phage therapy first caught the world's imagination--see, especially, Arrowsmith by Sinclair Lewis (1925)--and which today is the primary motivator of the field. Nonetheless, though the first human phage therapy took place in the 1920s, by the 1940s the field, was in steep decline despite early promise. The causes were at least three-fold: insufficient understanding among researchers…
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659
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- 23.08
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7Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Phage therapy
- Medicine
- Ignorance
- Antibiotic therapy
- Intensive care medicine
- Microbiology
- Bacteriophage
- Antibiotics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Zero hunger
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