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Metformin improves antibacterial treatment speed - Video
Overview
Old dogs may not learn new tricks, but old drugs can. according to a research team based in China. A collaboration found that Metformin, a small molecule drug that has been used to treat type II diabetes for more than 50 years, can improve the efficiency and efficacy of antibacterial treatments for quick wound-healing. The results were published in Nano Research journal.
The abuse of antibiotics has led to serious bacterial resistance, with about 1.27 million deaths in 2019 due to multidrug-resistant bacterial infections, bacterial resistance poses a fatal threat to human health. Non-antibiotic antibacterial technologies and antibacterial nanoagents with specific catalytic activities not only produce toxic substrates to directly kill bacteria-including antibiotic-resistant bacteria-but can also reduce the risk of the bacteria developing resistance to drugs.
The researchers set out to improve the antibacterial power of a nanoagent, while also lowering the toxicity to healthy cells-a risk that can be difficult to control due to the invasive nature of infection.
They speculated that the integration of metformin with a chemodynamic therapy nanoagent would improve the antibacterial effect. The researchers stirred metformin with copper chloride to form nanosheets whose surface was capped by the metformin molecules-enhancing the nanoagent's positive charge and strengthening the antibacterial effects.
Hence, it was confirmed that when metformin is used as antibacterial agent alone, excellent antimicrobial effects were achieved.
Speakers
Dr. Nandita Mohan
BDS, MDS( Pedodontics and Preventive Dentistry)