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Science & Technology
IBM lab designs molecule to kill drug-resistant superbugs
2018-04-07
[Medical Press] As a scientist at IBM's Almaden Research Laboratory, James Hedrick was well aware of the global problem of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, which can turn a minor scrape into a death sentence.

But the threat turned personal after he had routine knee surgery. Sudden excruciating pain signaled infection, demanding emergency hospitalization. Hedrick was lucky: the medications worked, the infection cleared and he went home eight days later.

Hedrick's close call inspired his research team to design a new molecule, called a polymer, that targets five deadly types of drug-resistant microbes and kills them like ninja assassins. Their research, a collaboration with Singapore's Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology, was reported recently in the journal Nature Communications.

If commercialized, the polymer could boost the fight against "superbugs" that can fend off every antibiotic that doctors throw at them. An estimated 700,000 people worldwide die every year from these untreatable infections.
Posted by:Besoeker

#3  So what happens if it crashes and you have to reboot; does the infection reinitialize also???

{IBM: I've Been Medicated)
Posted by: USN, Ret.   2018-04-07 20:25  

#2  "IBM's Almaden Research Laboratory"
"Institute of Bioengineering and Nanotechnology"

So it begins. These guys have already built these facilities, and you can bet their job isn't wait until a good idea comes along.
They're already working on something, or the bean counters would shut them down.
Posted by: ed in texas   2018-04-07 10:32  

#1  It carries a negative electrical charge, so is drawn—like a magnet—to the positively charged surfaces of infectious cells.

Ion channel transport?
That doesn't sound good.
Posted by: Skidmark   2018-04-07 08:20  

00:01