Antimicrobial Resistance: Wastewater's Hidden Threat

8 days ago
26

According to recent research, conventional wastewater treatment plants worldwide are unintentional breeding grounds for antimicrobial-resistant organisms. While these facilities remove visible contaminants, they create ideal conditions for bacteria to exchange resistance genes, with studies showing up to 30-fold increases in resistance gene concentration between incoming and outgoing waters. The treatment process creates "resistome hotspots" where bacteria can transfer genetic material horizontally across species through mechanisms like integrons and plasmids. This transfer is accelerated by the dense bacterial communities in activated sludge and the stress conditions created by disinfection methods. The World Health Organization considers antimicrobial resistance a "silent pandemic" currently causing 1.27 million deaths annually and potentially 10 million by 2050. Promising interventions include advanced oxidation processes, engineered bacteriophages, and CRISPR-based systems targeting resistance genes, though implementing these solutions in existing infrastructure presents significant challenges.

https://www.ihadnoclue.com/article/1110725604519804929

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