Bactericidal
Bactericides are chemical substances that bacteria kill. Bactericides belong to the group of microbicides .
Bactericides are found in the group of anti-infectives (for example some antibiotics ) and disinfectants .
The ability to kill pathogens is known as bactericidal . The adjective bactericidal describes the killing effect of a substance (e.g. an antibiotic) on bacteria. The pathogens need to be killed at least 99% within the first 4 hours after their application. In comparison, bacteriostatic substances only have a growth-inhibiting effect.
For historical reasons, too, the adjective tuberculocide is used for substances that have a bactericidal effect on tuberculosis pathogens .
See also
- Resistance , antibiotic resistance
- antimicrobial finish
- Antifungal agent (against fungi)
- Bacteriolysis
literature
- Klaus Grünewald: Theory of medical foot treatment. A specialist book for podiatry. Volume 1. 3rd, revised edition. Verlag Neuer Merkur GmbH, Munich 2006, ISBN 3-929360-60-8 , p. 232, ( digitized version ).
Web links
Wiktionary: bactericide - explanations of meanings, word origins, synonyms, translations
Individual evidence
- ↑ Hans Walter Striebel: The operative intensive care medicine: Safety in clinical practice . Schattauer Verlag, 2007, ISBN 978-3-7945-2480-8 , p. 642 ( digitized version ).