**image: **

(From right) NTU Associate Professor Guillaume Thibault, Research Fellow Dr Aaron Tan, who is holding an image of a microbial biofilm, and SCELSE Visiting Professor Kimberly Kline from the University of Geneva.

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Credit: NTU Singapore

An international team of scientists, led by Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore), has discovered a new way that could speed up the healing of chronic wounds infected by antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

Worldwide, chronic wounds represent a major health challenge, with an estimated 18.6 million people developing diabetic foot ulcers[1] each year. Up to one in three people with diabetes are at risk of developing a foot ulcer during t…

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