📖 generic · 12th TN - English Medium · ZOOLOGY · Page 158poem

Antibiotic resistance

Chapter 9: CHAPTER 9 · ZOOLOGY

Antibiotic resistance Antibiotic resistance occurs when bacteria develop the ability to defeat the drug designed to kill or inhibit their growth. It is one of the most acute threat to public health. Antibiotic resistance is accelerated by the misuse and over use of antibiotics, as well as poor infection prevention control. Antibiotics should be used only when prescribed by a certified health professional. When the bacteria become resistant, antibiotics cannot fight against them and the bacteria multiply. Narrow spectrum antibiotics are preferred over broad spectrum antibiotics. They effectively and accurately target specific pathogenic organisms and are less likely to cause resistance. " Superbug" is a term used to XII Std Zoology Chapter XII Std Zoology Chapter Microbes in Human Welfare Alcohol content in various beverages Beer - - percent. Wine - - percent Wine coolers - - percent. Whiskey, Gin, Scotch and Vodka - - percent. In some parts of South India, a traditional drink called pathaneer is obtained from fermenting sap of palms and coconut trees. A common source is tapping of unopened spadices of coconut. It is a refreshing drink, which on boiling produces jaggery or palm sugar. When pathaneer is left undisturbed for few hours it gets fermented to form toddy with the help of naturally occurring yeast, to form a beverage that contains percent alcohol. After hours toddy becomes unpalatable and is used for the production of vinegar. Saccharomyces cerevisiae is the major producer of ethanol (C H OH). It is used for industrial, laboratory and fuel purposes. So ethanol is referred to as industrial alcohol . Bacteria such as Zymomonas mobilis and Sarcina ventriculi are also involved in ethanol production. The principal substrates for the commercial production of industrial alcohol include molasses or corn, potatoes and wood wastes. The process of ethanol production starts by milling a feed stock followed by the addition of dilute or fungal amylase (enzyme) from Aspergillus to break down the starch into fermentable sugars. Yeast is then added to convert the sugars to ethanol which is then distilled off to obtain ethanol which is upto percent in concentration. The two most common type of biofuels in use today are ethanol and biodiesel, both of them represent the first generation of biofuel technology. Ethanol is often used as a fuel, mainly as a biofuel additive for gasoline. describe strains of bacteria that are resistant to the majority of antibiotics commonly used today.

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