Antibiotics are prescribed in 70 percent of patient encounters in Pakistan. Over-the-counter availability of the drugs allows many to buy antibiotics with no prescription at all. If antibiotic overuse remains the norm and bugs continue to develop immunity against the drugs, a dark future awaits us...1
Her name is Mehreen and she is 27. She has an unnerving habit of looking straight into the eyes of strangers during conversation until they get uncomfortable and look away. It is a wonderful thing, this assertion of her fearlessness, her right to the space she moves in.
She comes from a prosperous family that owns a 2-kanal (1,210 square yards) house in Defence Housing Authority next to a major academic institution. But at the moment, her job as vice president of a human resources company that operates in seven countries, her myriad family connections and her Ivy League education have all become irrelevant; for Mehreen is sick.
The fact of the matter is, Mehreen is dying.
Lying on the private bed of a large private hospital in Lahore, she stares at the ceiling with jaundiced eyes. Her body has been overwhelmed by septic shock — a state in which her blood vessels have widened to form tunnels incapable of supporting life-sustaining pumping pressure, resulting in a lack of oxygen supply to vital organs; her heart has weakened to less than 15 percent of its pumping capacity; her liver and lungs are drowning in her own body fluids. This is the frightening prequel to the inevitable collapse of her body’s organ systems, possibly culminating in death.
All this is the result of an infection that started inside her gut; her killer: a tiny stubborn bug that took residence in her body months ago.
Like Hitchkock’s Psycho silent at the keyhole, the bug waited in the shadows of her intestines for the right moment to strike; and the moment came when Mehreen picked up a pack of over-the-counter antibiotics from the drug store on her way home from gym. She had bad zukaam (flu) that was ‘just not going away’ and her doctor decided to prescribe a third-generation antibiotic for what was certainly no more than a common cold.
And now, in less than 48 hours, Mehreen will be dead.
2
Once upon a time you were a bug.
Some 3.7 billion years ago or so, you crawled out of a warm chemical soup composed of cooled gases and electrified clays.
You were a microscopic organism that — via kinetic movements and natural selection — withstood trillions of biochemical and electromagnetic interactions between particles of matter called molecules. Baked by the heat of a young sun, you made building blocks of proteins called amino acids, which began to come together in the right configuration. You were attacked by acids and alkalis, salts and heavy metals; nevertheless, you persisted.
Despite tremendous odds, because of tremendous odds, pieces of you gelled (call it love at millionth sight) and you became the composite you: the first stirring of Life on Earth.
Human beings are mostly bugs, over 100 trillion of them. From the inside of your mouth and intestines to the tip of your little toe, you are covered with this layer of benign microbes that makes you virtually invincible, possibly invisible, to billions of disease-causing pathogens.
With your awakening, came more attacks by nature and other organisms, which, too, were rapidly coming alive. Through trial and error, over billions of years, you figured that you could grow a tough outer membrane — skin — to protect your soft insides. You developed horns, nails and teeth to fight; flagella, tails and legs to escape danger if need be.
You negotiated with other peace-minded microorganisms and reached an effective deal worthy of envy by Pakistani political parties: these foreign bugs could live on and inside you, provided they paid rent in the shape of food or protection from more dangerous or pathogenic microbes. They were your friends and neighbours, ever ready to provide succour; and they covered every part of you.
Human beings are mostly bugs, over 100 trillion of them. From the inside of your mouth and intestines to the tip of your little toe, you are covered with this layer of benign microbes that makes you virtually invincible, possibly invisible, to billions of disease-causing pathogens.
This Cloak of Invisibility is called your ‘microbiota’ (all the genes in these bugs collectively called the ‘microbiome’) and it is one of the most exciting areas of research in medicine today.
We know that this symbiotic swarm of living things on our body reached this balance over a staggering amount of time. Enough time to reach an ecological homeostasis, a wonderful balance of give and take. We protect each other from hostile pathogens, we regulate each other’s metabolism. The bacteria in our microbiome help digest our food, fortify our immune system and produce vitamins to help correct our nutritional deficiencies. They even drive our craving for dark chocolate!
In short, they know our deepest darkest secrets.
Yet, once in a while, a pathogen breaks through the barriers of skin and the microbiota. It is dangerous and may cause severe infection with spread of the bug throughout the body. Fortunately, in most cases, it is detected by our immune system — a multipronged army of specialised cells — that chases, contains and kills these invaders. The body is quite vigilant and diligent, as it turns out.