eprintid: 819 rev_number: 8 eprint_status: archive userid: 5 source: Scopus dir: disk0/00/00/08/19 datestamp: 2023-10-17 16:08:43 lastmod: 2023-10-17 16:08:43 status_changed: 2023-10-17 16:08:43 type: article metadata_visibility: show creators_name: Zeedan, G.S.G. creators_name: Abdalhamed, A.M. creators_name: Ghazy, A.A. title: Strategies for Prevention and Control of Multidrug-resistant Bacteria in Ruminants ispublished: pub subjects: SF divisions: j13 full_text_status: public keywords: antibiotic agent; bacterial vaccine; bacteriocin; immunoglobulin Y; immunomodulating agent; immunostimulating agent; inactivated vaccine; live vaccine; plant extract; polypeptide antibiotic agent; prebiotic agent; probiotic agent; recombinant vaccine; synbiotic agent; toxoid, agricultural land; alternative medicine; animal food; antibiotic resistance; Article; bacterial infection; biosecurity; infection control; infection prevention; management; multidrug resistant bacterium; nonhuman; phage therapy; ruminant note: Department of Parasitology and Animal Diseases (Infectious Diseases), National Research Centre, Dokki,33 Bohouth Street, Giza, 12622, Egypt abstract: Antibiotics are no longer effective in treating bacterial infections due to antimicrobial drug resistance. Therefore, various alternative strategies have been developed to combat multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria. The current review article aimed to shed light on strategies to prevent and control MDR bacteria in ruminants. Due to the development of new resistant bacteria, there is a need for effective treatments and prevention protocols in livestock and humans. With growing antibiotic-resistant organisms, a few antimicrobial medicines will be available to treat the infection when no new drugs are developed. This highlights the importance of looking for other strategies for combating antibiotic-resistant bacteria. In this regard, alternative strategies have been proposed to minimize antimicrobial drug overuse in ruminants. These alternative procedures include alternatives for growth promotion (such as in-feed enzymes, probiotics, prebiotics, synbiotics, and antimicrobial peptides), alternatives for disease prevention (such as vaccines, immune modulators, chicken egg yolk antibodies, farm management, and biosecurity), and alternatives for disease treatment such as plant extracts and phage-therapy to antibiotics. These alternative methods should be safe and efficient without inducing microbial resistance © 2023, World's Veterinary Journal.All Rights Reserved. date: 2023-03-25 publication: World's Veterinary Journal volume: 13 number: 1 publisher: Scienceline Publication pagerange: 45-56 id_number: 10.54203/scil.2023.wvj5 refereed: TRUE issn: 23224568 official_url: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85151872935&doi=10.54203%2fscil.2023.wvj5&partnerID=40&md5=72ae3348cdafa36ea9e93d5e731ee724 j_index: scopus citation: (2023) Strategies for Prevention and Control of Multidrug-resistant Bacteria in Ruminants. World's Veterinary Journal. pp. 45-56. ISSN 23224568 document_url: http://eprints.science-line.com/id/eprint/819/1/WVJ%2013%281%29%2C%2045-56%2C%20March%2025%2C%202023.pdf