Drugs for Medicine (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE Co-ordinated Sciences (Double Award)): Revision Note

Naomi Holyoak

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What is a Drug?

  • A drug can be defined as:

A substance taken into the body that modifies or affects chemical reactions in the body

  • Some drugs are medicinal drugs that are used to treat the symptoms or causes of a disease, e.g.

    • Painkillers

    • Antibiotics

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Antibiotics

  • Antibiotics are chemical substances that can kill bacterial cells, meaning that they are useful in the treatment of bacterial infections

    • Antibiotics target processes and structures that are specific to bacterial cells so they do not harm animal cells

  • Antibiotics kill bacteria but have no effect on viruses, so they are never used in the treatment of viral infections

  • It is possible for bacteria to develop antibiotic resistance, meaning that exposure to an antibiotic will not kill the resistant bacteria

How antibiotics work, IGCSE & GCSE Biology revision notes

Antibiotics kill bacterial cells, e.g. by damaging bacterial cell walls

Antibiotic Resistance & Use: Extended

Extended Tier Only

  • Antibiotic resistance only becomes widespread among bacterial populations when bacteria come into contact with an antibiotic

    • This is because contact causes non-resistant bacteria to be killed while the resistant individuals will survive and reproduce

  • This means that reducing antibiotic use can reduce the spread of resistance in bacteria

    • Doctors will only prescribe antibiotics when they are essential

    • Antibiotics are never prescribed for viral infections

  • Reducing antibiotic use is one strategy in the fight against antibiotic resistant strains of bacteria such as MRSA

    • MRSA = methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus

Development of antibiotic resistance diagram

Antibiotic resistance

Exposure to antibiotics increases the likelihood that resistance will become widespread in a bacterial population; this means that decreasing antibiotic use will limit the development of resistant strains such as MRSA

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Naomi Holyoak

Author: Naomi Holyoak

Expertise: Biology Content Creator

Naomi graduated from the University of Oxford with a degree in Biological Sciences. She has 8 years of classroom experience teaching Key Stage 3 up to A-Level biology, and is currently a tutor and A-Level examiner. Naomi especially enjoys creating resources that enable students to build a solid understanding of subject content, while also connecting their knowledge with biology’s exciting, real-world applications.

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