Science Inventory

OXIDATION OF ANTIBIOTICS IN WASTEWATER: IDENTIFYING PRODUCTS AND IMPACTS ON ANTIBACTERIAL ACTIVITY

Impact/Purpose:

The increasing use of pharmaceuticals in our society has resulted in the scientific community recognizing these drugs as an emerging environmental contaminant. Among them, antibiotics are of special importance because they are used in large quantities and have been routinely detected in many waterways. Antibiotics have been implicated as one of the causes for the rise of pathogen resistance to antibacterial compounds. Wastewater treatment plant effluents are a major conveyor of human antibiotics into the environment. The project’s goal is to evaluate the application of ultraviolet-based advanced oxidation as an advanced wastewater treatment method for its efficiency in degrading antibiotics such that they are inactive in the environment, helping to prevent microorganisms from developing widespread resistance to existing drugs.

Synopsis:

Human antibiotics are often found in waterways as a result of the improper disposal of drugs. The presence of antibiotics in the environment is undesirable because it can lead to the development of antibiotic resistant strains of human pathogens and upset the ecological balance of the natural environment. Most human pharmaceuticals enter water sources through wastewater treatment plant effluent. This project will focus on advanced wastewater treatment technologies that can degrade antibiotics.

Description:

It is hypothesized that advanced oxidation can be applied effectively and in an economically responsible manner for the removal of the antibacterial activity of antibiotics. Ultimately, this study will develop a set of recommendations for the application of advanced oxidation processes to wastewater treatment. Effective removal of antibacterial activity of antibiotics entering the environment can prevent the rise of widespread antibiotic resistance of human pathogens, which is a growing problem world-wide.

Potential to Further Environmental/Human Health Protection:

This study intends to develop process application guidelines that will aid in the design of advanced wastewater treatment systems for removal of antibacterial activity of antibiotics. If regulation of specific antibiotics contaminating our waterways is enacted in the future, this study will provide information on the use of advanced oxidation processes to destroy antibiotic activity. Removal of the activity of the antibiotics entering the environment is essential for preventing resistance among human pathogens to the currently available classes of antibacterial drugs.

Record Details:

Record Type:PROJECT( ABSTRACT )
Start Date:08/31/2010
Completion Date:08/30/2013
Record ID: 249408