


For microbiologists the great ESKAPE is not an old film on the telly at Christmas. It’s a classification of the six most deadly antibiotic resistant bacteria which they work with. These are of course: Enterococcus faecium, Staphylococcus aureus, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Acinetobacter baumannii, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Enterobacter spp.In other words, the bacteria that most effectively “escape” the effects of antibiotics, and thus sit at the heart of our current global antimicrobial‑resistance crisis. Now hope that they might be controlled is emerging from the icy caves of the Carpathian Mountains. And you might be forgiven for thinking that at first sight it actually makes things worse.
Because frozen in the ancient soil of Carpathian caves lies a bacteria with the snappy name Psychrobacter SC65A.3 -and it’s no less than 5,500 years old. We we’ve got two covers for you today: one in Spanish from that excellent newspaper El País by Miguel Ángel Criado and one from the Mail by Shivali Best. Both wax eloquent on its dangers: it seems resistant to at least a dozen of the best-known antibiotics. But here’s the rub: the same evolutionary toughness which let it develop these remarkable powers of resistance has also let it develop remarkable powers as an enemy of other bacteria. Including many of those on our ESKAPE list.
The natural tendency of people is to look at the scary side of anything: and thereby jump to the worst possible conclusions. We know that our readers are the ones who suspend belief a little longer, and always look deeper. In the long run that’s the only type of thinking that will release us from the antibiotics resistance crisis. And many others
#antibiotic resistance #microbiology #medicine #health #bacteria #ESKAPE


























