š
Minho & Amber ā„Ā ā¦. (meanwhile Kibum completely done with them in the backgroundĀ š)
I looked for love in things that were not love.
Florence Welch, referring to what inspired her to write the song āHunger,ā (via violentwavesofemotion)
Credit: @moderndaymanifestations
9.8.19 // sunlit evening
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Iām sorry, this isnāt Jojo at all but I think Iāve had it for today. As a pharmacy tech, Iām tired of hearing āWell, I started to feel better so I didnāt finish them.āĀ I always knew this but now as a Molecular and Cellular Biology major, I not only know why but how. If youāre willing to heed my advice from the title, good; be on your way. If you need to know more, keep reading.
But in an infection,Ā you already have resistant bacteria lurking. Not taking antibiotics doesnāt literally create resistant bacteria. So how, then, do the antibiotics take care of the resistant ones?
A lot of antibiotics arenāt bacterialcidal: They donāt actually kill them. Many inhibit growth by some mechanism depending if the bacterium is gram negative or gram positive. For example, penicillin inhibits growth by disrupting the formation of a peptidoglycan layer on gram positive bacteria. Others target the LPS layer on gram negative ones. This keeps the non resistant bacteria at bay. So what kills the resistant ones? Your immune system. Antibiotics buy time and energy for your immune system to recognize and destroy the resistant strains. Your immune system is intelligent in that sense and can form antibodies for new illnesses. Itās important to give your immune system this time because bacteria grow, mutate, and transfer genetic material at astonishing rates. If you wanted to look at a microcosm of the mechanics that go into evolution, youāve got it with bacteria.Ā
There are three methods aside from binary fission in which they transfer genes (I wonāt get into the minutia of the form of informational material): Transformation, transduction and conjugation.
In transformation, a bacterium can pickup lost genes from a ruptured and dead cell.
Transduction is a way to transfer information via a viral vector.
In conjugation, genes are transferred through something called a pilus: Itās a bridge between two cells that pipes a copy of the information from one cell to another receptive cell and is the only method that doesnāt involve killing either cells. Resistant bacteria like to give around that resistance information like theyāre burning a CD for their friends.
So please finish your antibiotics if youāve been given them. It doesnāt matter if youāve started to feel better or even great. Finish them.
(Hey science people, If Iāve missed anything or even got something wrong, help me out. Thereās obviously lengthy stuff Iāve left out but I think I got the basics).
Poor pupper had a big rash from (we think) a hot spot that was left untreated :( Itās looking much better now that heās getting proper treatment though!
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