A recent study from the CDC found a nearly 70% increase in the spread of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales (CRE).
A new report from the CDC reveals that infection rates for a drug-resistant “nightmare bacteria” are on the rise, increasing ...
Despite rapid advances in reading the genetic code of living organisms, scientists still face a major challenge today—knowing ...
Mice and newts were applied to the one-step Cre-loxP organism creation technology by TAx9. In this study, the researchers succeeded in synthesizing a Cre-loxP integrated vector by placing a short DNA ...
A dangerous drug-resistant bacteria called NDM-CRE is spreading rapidly across the U.S., resisting most antibiotics and proving difficult for doctors to treat.
The infection rate of one type of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacterales bacteria has risen by more than 460 percent in recent ...
The infections are largely resistant to antibiotics ...
Infections tied to the NDM gene have grown more than fivefold since 2019, leaving only two expensive drugs as treatment options.
NDM-CRE infections have been historically uncommon in the United States, the CDC said. The NDM gene — which was first identified in 2008 from a Swedish patient who had been hospitalized in New Delhi — ...