Anti-infective
Drugs / Online Biographies Book
Anti-infective
drugs are classified as antibacterials, antivirals, or antifungals depending on
the type of microorganism they combat. Anti-infective drugs interfere selectively
with the functioning of a microorganism while leaving the human host unharmed.
Antibacterial drugs, or antibiotics-sulfa drugs, penicillins, cephalosporins,
and many others-either kill bacteria directly or prevent them from multiplying
so that the body's immune system can destroy invading bacteria. Antibacterial
drugs act by interfering with some specific characteristics of bacteria. For example,
they may destroy bacterial cell walls or interfere with the synthesis of bacterial
proteins or deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)-the chemical that carries the genetic
material of an organism. Antibiotics often cure an infection completely. However,
bacteria can spontaneously mutate, producing strains that are resistant to existing
antibiotics. Antiviral drugs interfere with the life cycle of a virus by preventing
its penetration into a host cell or by blocking the synthesis of new viruses.
Antiviral drugs may cure, but often only suppress, viral infections; and flare-ups
of an infection can occur after symptom-free periods. With some viruses, such
as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which causes acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome (AIDS), antiviral drugs can only prolong life, not cure the disease.
Vaccines are used as antiviral drugs against diseases such like mumps, measles,
smallpox, poliomyelitis, and influenza. Vaccines are made from either live, weakened
viruses or killed viruses, both of which are designed to stimulate the immune
system to produce antibodies, proteins that attack foreign substances. These antibodies
protect the body from future infections by viruses of the same type. Antifungal
drugs selectively destroy fungal cells by altering cell walls. The cells' contents
leak out and the cells die. Antifungal drugs can cure, or may only suppress, a
fungal infection.
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