Silver Nanoparticles and Antibiotics: A Promising Synergistic Approach to Multidrug-Resistant Infections
Date
2025-04Permanent link
http://hdl.handle.net/11351/13340DOI
10.3390/microorganisms13040952
ISSN
2076-2607
WOS
001475121300001
PMID
40284788
Abstract
The escalating threat of antibiotic resistance demands innovative strategies against multidrug-resistant (MDR) microorganisms, particularly in hospital settings where such infections represent a major global health challenge. Since the rapid growth of nanotechnology interdisciplinary research and funding programs in the 2000s, silver ions have re-emerged as potent antimicrobial agents, offering a promising complement to conventional therapies. This therapeutic potential is nowadays explored through the use of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) as sources for silver ions release. Recent studies have shown that controlled silver ion release enhances the efficacy of common antibiotics. This can be attributed to the energetically demanding nature of the bacterial response to silver, which weakens bacterial metabolism and, in turn, overwhelms bacterial defenses and increases antibiotic effectiveness. Herein, historical insights into the use of colloidal silver and AgNPs are combined with a review of recent research on the exploitation of the synergistic effect between AgNPs and antibiotics as a promising strategy against MDR pathogens.
Keywords
Antibiotic resistance; Antimicrobial synergy; Silver nanoparticlesBibliographic citation
Casals E, Gusta MF, Bastus N, Rello J, Puntes V. Silver Nanoparticles and Antibiotics: A Promising Synergistic Approach to Multidrug-Resistant Infections. Microorganisms. 2025 Apr;13(4):952.
Audience
Professionals
This item appears in following collections
- VHIR - Articles científics [1751]
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