Investigating the Relationship Between Statins and Bacterial Skin Infections

Statins are extensively prescribed medicines to reduce cholesterol for cardioprotection, but they also exhibit antimicrobial and pleiotropic effects, which plausibly reduces both skin infection risks and antimicrobial resistance. Adopting a bench-to-bedside framework, the results of laboratory exper...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ko, Hean Teik Humphrey
Format: Thesis
Published: Curtin University 2019
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/77546
Description
Summary:Statins are extensively prescribed medicines to reduce cholesterol for cardioprotection, but they also exhibit antimicrobial and pleiotropic effects, which plausibly reduces both skin infection risks and antimicrobial resistance. Adopting a bench-to-bedside framework, the results of laboratory experiments (identifying suitable statins as topical antibiotics and postulating a mechanism of antibacterial action) and clinical evidence (via prescription sequence symmetry analysis and a retrospective case-control study) were reconciled to determine if prior statin use translated into beneficial outcomes.