The clinical impact of bacterial biofilms
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Abstract
Bacteria survive in nature by forming biofilms on surfaces and probably most, if not all, bacteria (and fungi) are capable of forming biofilms. A biofilm is a structured consortium of bacteria embedded in a self-produced polymer matrix consisting of polysaccharide, protein and extracellular DNA. Bacterial biofilms are resistant to antibiotics, disinfectant chemicals and to phagocytosis and other components of the innate and adaptive inflammatory defense system of the body. It is known, for example, that persistence of staphylococcal infections related to foreign bodies is due to biofilm formation. Likewise, chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa lung infections in cystic fibrosis patients are caused by biofilm growing…
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895
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Authors
10Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Biofilm
- Quorum sensing
- Microbiology
- Bacteria
- Pseudomonas aeruginosa
- Multidrug tolerance
- Virulence
- Antibiotics
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