Title: Drugs for Bacterial, Viral, and Fungal Infections Infectio
1Drugs for Bacterial, Viral, and Fungal Infections
2Infection
- How do we get infected?
- Role of our immune system
- Who are they?
- What can we do to help?
- Chemotherapeutics
- Antibiotics
- Antiviral
- Antifungal
3Antibiotics
- Bacteria good or bad?
- Unicellular
- Must feed from a host
- How are Antibiotics classified?
- Spectrum of activity narrow or broad
- Bactericidal or bacteriostatic
4Antibiotics Which One to Choose?
- Identification of the organism
- Taking a sample (throat culture)
- Drug sensitivity
- Testing of culture to determine which
chemotherapeutics to use - Host factors
- Status of immune system
- Site and concentration of infection
- age
5Antibiotics that Inhibit Cell Wall Synthesis
- Penicillin
- Passes thru the cell wall of the infected cell
and inhibits construction of the bacteriums cell
wall - Can be administered orally or by injection
- Ear infections, pneumonia, skin infections,
urinary tract infections - Adverse reactions include rashes, anaphylactic
reactions, swelling
6Antibiotics that Inhibit Cell Wall Synthesis
cont.
- Cephalosporins
- Broader application base than penicillin
- Used for skin, soft tissue infections,
respiratory infections, meningitis - Adverse reactions are hypersensitivity
- Often used when allergic reaction to penicillin
7Antibiotics that Inhibit Protein Synthesis
- Tetracyclines
- Broad-spectrum class
- Lyme disease, syphilis, acne
- Adverse reaction to calcium (dairy), iron, zinc,
magnesium, aluminum - May cause GI distress, increase sensitivity to sun
8Antibiotics that Inhibit Protein Synthesis
- Macrolides (erythromycin)
- Alternative choice to penicillin (allergy)
- Oral or IV
- Adverse reactions GI disturbance, potential
interactions with other drugs - Clindamycin
- Unique in that it has antibacterial activity
against microbes (anaerobes) that survive without
O2 - Can cause diarrhea
9Antibiotics that Inhibit DNA Synthesis
- Fluoroquinolones
- Broad-spectrum bacterial infections
- Inhibit the coiling process of the bacterial DNA
- Typically NOT used with children associated
with tendon tissue weakening
10Antibiotics that Inhibit Folic Acid Synthesis
- Sulfonamides (sulfa drugs)
- Developed prior to penicillin
- Used infrequently
- Used to treat urinary tract infections
11Antibiotic Generic Brand Action
penicillin penicillian amoxicillian Ampicillin Amoxil, Keflex I bacterial CW Synthesis
1stgen Cephalosporin cephalexin Keflex
2nd gen Cephalosporin Cefprozil 2nd Cefzil, Ceclor
3rd gen Cephalosporin Cefixime 3rd Suprax
4th gen Cephalosporin Cefepime 4th Maxipime
Aminogylocide Tobramycin Nebcin, Amikin I bact pro syn
Flouroquinolone Ciproflacin Cipro, Levaquin I bac DNA syn
Tetracycline Tetracycline Minocin I bac pro syn
Macrolide erthromycin Zithromax
Sulfonamide sulfamethoxazole Bactrim I bac folic acid syn
12Other Qualities of Antibiotics
- Adverse Effects
- Hypersensitivity
- Diarrhea
- GI distress
- Itching
- Rashes
- Ultraviolet sensitivity
- Antibiotic Resistance
- Reduced efficacy due to overuse
- Excessive use of antibiotic soaps
- Raised resistance levels of bacteria
13Antiviral Agents
- Infection a desire to replicate itself via DNA
or RNA - Virus can mutate into more serve condition
- Viral agents can persist for weeks
- Limited Tx regimes
- See Pg 127 for common examples
14Treatment Protocols
- Oral Medications
- Acyclovir (herpes)
- Inhibits viral DNA replication
- Docosanol (Abreva) OTC medication for cold
sores - Zanamivir (Relenza) used to treat influenza
- Vaccines
- Injection of an inactivated virus (unable to
replicate), causes body to make antibodies
15Antifungal Agents
- Most common seen on epidermis
- Needs to survive warmth, moisture, darkness
- Where do we see most fungal infections?
- Tinea (skin)
- Tinea capitis (ringworm of scalp)
- Tinea corporis (trunk area)
- Tinea cruris (jock itch)
- Tinea pedis (athletes foot)
- Onychomycosis (nail fungus)
16Management of Fungal Infections
- Prevent infection from becoming systemic
- Spread through direct/indirect contact
- Poor hygiene
- Medications
- Oral or topical (table 9-4)
- Takes 3-8 weeks for successful tx
- Can re-appear frequently