Latakia - Sana
The Syrian young man, Zain Baiati, ranked first in the department of cancer treatment and antibiotic resistance, during his participation in the first conference of the European Universities Alliance for Global Health, which includes five prestigious universities from Germany, France, Portugal, Sweden and Hungary.
Baiaiti, a graduate of the Faculty of Pharmacy at Tishreen University and studying for a doctorate at the University of Hungary, said during his conversation with SANA the importance of the study that he reviewed during the conference and deals with the phenomenon of heterogeneous resistance to antibiotics in an anaerobic germs that are widely spread in the human body and are among the main causes of failure of antibiotic treatment. Vitality.
He also touched on the efforts made recently to define the defense mechanism of these germs and to define reference methods for their detection, indicating that he was able to study this mechanism in a very important type of bacteria, namely Fragile Bacteria, and partially determined its mechanism of action.
Baiti added that the research contributes greatly to understanding the phenomenon of bacterial resistance to antibiotics, which kills at least 700,000 people annually, while cancer kills millions of people annually, with expectations of an increase in the number of deaths due to this phenomenon by the year 2050, according to reports of global health organizations, stressing that in Once we discovered the mechanism of resistance, the chances of treatment increased more quickly and more effectively.
Dr. Zain Baiaiti was born in 1989, graduated from the Faculty of Pharmacy at Tishreen University in 2012 and obtained a master's degree in laboratory diagnostics in 2017 and is currently attending a doctoral degree and has participated in many local and international conferences, the most important of which is the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases conference, which is considered the largest conference of microbiology in Amsterdam.
Rasha Raslan