• About Us
  • Our Editorial Policy
  • Business Directory
  • Advertise with Us
  • Our Advertisers
  • Contact Us
Australia India News
India News Australia
  • Home
  • Current Issue
    Past Issue
  • India News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • World
    World This Week
  • Community News
  • What's On
  • Others
    Yoga in Australia News COVID-19 Community News Naari IPL News Health Travel Entertainment
  • Migrants Expo
  • National Events
  • Please wait..
Science

New antibiotic to curb dangerous gut bacterium with a low dose

  • BY India News Newsdesk
  • October 14, 2025
  • 0 COMMENTS

New Delhi, Oct 14 (IANS) The new antibiotic EVG7 has demonstrated the ability to fight the dangerous gut bacterium C. difficile with only a minimal dose, a new study showed.

C. difficile is a persistent intestinal bacterium that can cause severe illness, particularly in older people and those with weakened health.

The bacterium produces a toxin that leads to severe diarrhoea. Current treatments are not always effective, as the infection often returns.

“With existing antibiotics, C. difficile sometimes reappears just weeks after treatment,” said researcher and lead author Elma Mons, from the varsity.

“This happens partly because the bacterium leaves behind spores, which can develop into new bacteria, causing the infection to return,” Mons said.

The team investigated the effect of a low dose of EVG7 on C. difficile in mice.

The results showed that the C. difficile bacteria were far less likely to return. In contrast, a lower dose of vancomycin did not have the same effect, nor did a higher dose of EVG7.

The researchers found that mice given a low dose of EVG7 retained far more beneficial bacteria (from the Lachnospiraceae family).

“Those bacteria actually protect against C. difficile,” Mons said.

In other words: while existing treatments tend to kill many bacteria essential for good health, a low dose of EVG7 leaves most of them intact. These beneficial bacteria help prevent the infection from recurring by keeping residual spores from growing into harmful C. difficile bacteria.

While using lower antibiotic doses are generally known to promote resistance, a low dose EVG7 was found to effectively kill C. difficile making it less prone to inducing resistance.

“Antibiotic resistance occurs when you don’t completely kill the bacteria but merely irritate them,” Mons said, adding that “they can then come back stronger.”

–IANS

rvt/

Post navigation

Sensex, Nifty end lower amid broad-based selling
Former President Kovind to launch NHRC’s 32nd Foundation Day event on Oct 16

Related Post

Over 900 suspected cases identified in Congo Ebola response: WHO chief
May 25, 2026
Bangladesh measles outbreak death toll rises to 528 after 16 more fatalities
May 25, 2026
Andhra Pradesh’s Chityala records season’s highest temperature at 48.3 degrees Celsius
May 25, 2026
Burkina Faso strengthens preventive measures against Ebola
May 25, 2026

Our Current Issue

Australia IA – May 16-31, 2026

Alluring India 2026

Alluring India 2026

Our Advertisers

  • Battery Rebate australia
  • Bess Australia Solar Panels

Follow Us

  • facebook
  • facebook
  • facebook
  • facebook
INDIA NEWS on YouTube in Australia, bring to our readers and subscribers national and international news, editorials, expert columns, community activities and interviews of political leaders, celebrities, business professionals, academics and sport personalities among others.
  • facebook
  • facebook
  • facebook
  • facebook

Category

  • Accident
  • Adani Australia
  • Advertorial
  • Arts & Culture
  • Ashes 2022
  • Australia

Recent News

  • Microsoft cuts Claude Code access as AI...
  • 13-nation ‘Exercise PRAGATI 2026’ in Meghalaya strengthens...

Subscribe Newsletter

Get the latest creative news from india news

  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer