4.8 Review

Nanomedicine in the management of microbial infection - Overview and perspectives

Journal

NANO TODAY
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages 478-498

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.nantod.2014.06.003

Keywords

Nanomedicine; Microbial infection; Diagnosis; Therapy; Medical device; Vaccine

Funding

  1. NIH [R00CA160350, U54-CA151884]
  2. David Koch - Prostate Cancer Foundation Program in Nanotherapeutics
  3. Movember-PCF Challenge Award
  4. PCF Young Investigator Award
  5. State Scholarship Fund of China

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For more than 2 billion years, microbes have reigned on our planet, evolving or outlasting many obstacles they have encountered. In the 20th century, this trend took a dramatic turn with the introduction of antibiotics and vaccines. Nevertheless, since then, microbes have progressively eroded the effectiveness of previously successful antibiotics by developing resistance, and many infections have eluded conventional vaccine design approaches. Moreover, the emergence of resistant and more virulent strains of bacteria has outpaced the development of new antibiotics over the last few decades. These trends have had major economic and health impacts at all levels of the socioeconomic spectrum we need breakthrough innovations that could effectively manage microbial infections and deliver solutions that stand the test of time. The application of nanotechnologies to medicine, or nanomedicine, which has already demonstrated its tremendous impact on the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries, is rapidly becoming a major driving force behind ongoing changes in the antimicrobial field. Here we provide an overview on the current progress of nanomedicine in the management of microbial infection, including diagnosis, antimicrobial therapy, drug delivery, medical devices, and vaccines, as well as perspectives on the opportunities and challenges in antimicrobial nanomedicine. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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