Giant pandas have been found to produce a powerful antibiotic in their blood that rapidly kills pathogens. The discovery has potential applications for the treatment of superbugs and other diseases in humans.
Superbugs may become a thing of the past thanks to an antimicrobial solution designed to attract and kill bacteria.
New clues to the origins of antibiotic resistance have been found deep underground inside Lechugilla Cave in New Mexico by North American researchers.
Claim that drug-resistant superbugs had spread from India to the U.K. rejected by the Indian Health Ministry.
A new class of drug-resistant superbugs may be spreading across the globe, according to a Lancet report.
Giant pandas have been found to produce a powerful antibiotic in their blood that rapidly kills pathogens. The discovery has potential applications for the treatment of superbugs and other diseases in humans.
Superbugs may become a thing of the past thanks to an antimicrobial solution designed to attract and kill bacteria.
New clues to the origins of antibiotic resistance have been found deep underground inside Lechugilla Cave in New Mexico by North American researchers.
Claim that drug-resistant superbugs had spread from India to the U.K. rejected by the Indian Health Ministry.
A new class of drug-resistant superbugs may be spreading across the globe, according to a Lancet report.