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Home > Broad-spectrum antibiotic


A broad-spectrum antibiotic is so called due to its activity against a wide range of infectious agents. A good example is amoxicillin.

Uses

Broad-spectrum antibiotics are used in roughly two medical situations:

Generally, the spectrum is "narrowed down" when the causative agent of an infection becomes known, and the broad-spectrum agent is replaced by a narrower-spectrum antibiotic. This is supposed to limit the development of antibiotic resistance, although evidence for this practice is unclear.





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