Is there a correlation between antibiotic use and the severity or post-infection conditions of COVID-19 and other viral infections?

Antibiotics are one of the most frequently prescribed medications in modern medicine; besides treating bacterial infections, they may often be utilized for prophylactic purposes, including during select viral infections. It has been shown that 74.9% of COVID-19 patients received antibiotics as a par...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical and experimental medicine 2023-12, Vol.23 (8), p.4123-4128
Hauptverfasser: Au, Tsz Yuen, Assavarittirong, Chanika, Benjamin, Shamiram, Wiśniewski, Oskar Wojciech
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Antibiotics are one of the most frequently prescribed medications in modern medicine; besides treating bacterial infections, they may often be utilized for prophylactic purposes, including during select viral infections. It has been shown that 74.9% of COVID-19 patients received antibiotics as a part of their treatment regimen during the pandemic. However, studies suggest that the actual incidence of bacterial coinfection was relatively uncommon with a mere 3.5% of overall cases reported. A recent study revealed that antibiotic administration would not improve disease progression or shorten the length of hospitalization in COVID-19 patients; additionally, some antibiotics, such as linezolid, promote the production of free radicals that might be responsible for exacerbated clinical symptoms during and post-infection. Notably, antibiotic use disturbs the normal gut microbiome, and this interference impedes antiviral immune response enhancing severity and susceptibility to a list of viral infections. Thus, resultant augmented severity of these infections may be a consequence of higher susceptibility to respiratory viral co-infection.
ISSN:1591-9528
1591-8890
1591-9528
DOI:10.1007/s10238-023-01171-5