2. Differentiate between narrow-spectrum and broad-spectrum antibiotics. How might one determine whether a particular antimicrobic is broad- or narrow-spectrum? 3. What is the major source of antibiotics? 4. Using the following diagram as a guide, briefly explain how the three factors in drug therapy interact. What drug characteristics will make treatment most effective? 5. Explain the major modes of action of antimicrobial drugs, and give an example of
each. 6. Explain the phenomenon of drug resistance from the standpoint of microbial genetics (include a description of R factors). How can one test for drug resistance? Multiple drug resistance is becoming increasingly common in microorganisms. Explain how one bacterium can acquire resistance to several drugs. 7. Explain four general ways that microbes evade the effects of drugs. 8. What causes mutated or plasmid-altered strains of drug-resistant microbes to persist in a population? 9. Construct a chart that summarizes the modes of action and applications of the major groups of antibacterial drugs (antibiotics and synthetics), antifungal drugs, antiparasitic drugs, and antiviral drugs. 10. Explain why there are so few antifungal, antiparasitic, and antiviral drugs. 11. Generally overview the adverse effects of antimicrobic drugs on the host. 12. Outline the steps in antimicrobic susceptibility testing.
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