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  1. Antibiotics have been used for millennia to treat infections, although until the last century or so people did not know the infections were caused by bacteria. Various moulds and plant extracts were used to treat infections by some of the earliest civilisations – the ancient Egyptians, for example, applied mouldy bread to infected wounds.

  2. 8 de dic. de 2010 · This article gives a very brief overview of the antibiotic era, beginning from the discovery of first antibiotics until the present day situation, which is marred by the emergence of hard-to-treat multiple antibiotic-resistant infections.

    • Rustam I. Aminov
    • 2010
  3. 5 de jul. de 2017 · The advent of modern antibiotics contributed enormously to the dramatic extension of human lifespan since their discovery by virtue of their lethal and selective action against pathogenic...

    • Kyriacos C Nicolaou, Stephan Rigol
    • 2018
  4. 1 de oct. de 2019 · A brief history of antibiotics. The use of antibiotic-producing microbes to prevent disease stretches back millennia, with traditional poultices of mouldy bread being used to treat open wounds in Serbia, China, Greece and Egypt more than 2000 years ago.

    • Matthew I Hutchings, Andrew W Truman, Barrie Wilkinson
    • 2019
  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AntibioticAntibiotic - Wikipedia

    Antibiotics revolutionized medicine in the 20th century. Synthetic antibiotic chemotherapy as a science and development of antibacterials began in Germany with Paul Ehrlich in the late 1880s. Alexander Fleming (1881–1955) discovered modern day penicillin in 1928, the widespread use of which proved significantly beneficial during ...

  6. 10 de ago. de 2022 · The brief history of antibiotics, mere decades since their discovery in the mid-20th century, is one of tremendous success and transformative impact on medicine. The direct control and prevention of infection offered by these drugs have profoundly changed the trajectory of human life.

  7. The discovery of penicillin in 1928 started the golden age of natural product antibiotic discovery that peaked in the mid-1950s. Since then, a gradual decline in antibiotic discovery and development and the evolution of drug resistance in many human pathogens has led to the current antimicrobial resistance crisis.