Multiple Choice
Which of the following best explains why broad-spectrum antimicrobials are more likely to lead to superinfections?
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The regular use of antibiotics can cause a mutation that enables Candida albicans to thrive in the presence of antibiotics.
Because Candida albicans is a fungus, it is not killed by antibiotics, leaving it capable of causing infection after antibiotic use.
Some Candida albicans cells naturally have resistance to specific antibiotics; these Candida strains replace the susceptible strains.
Candida albicans is not normally present on the body, but it is regularly introduced when antibiotics are taken in a hospital setting.
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