Title: ANTIBIOTICS A brief overview for DMAT PA-1
1ANTIBIOTICSA brief overview for DMAT PA-1
2DEFINITIONS
- Antibiotic- agents derived from natural sources
(bacteria or molds) used to treat infection by
suppressing or destroying the causative
microorganism - Antimicrobial- those anti-infective agents which
are derived from synthetic substances - these two terms are now used interchangeably
- Antiseptic- an agent used to inhibit bacterial
growth - Bacteria- microscopic single-celled organisms
containing DNA and cell walls - Bactericidal- kills the bacteria
- Bacteriostatic- inhibits the growth of the
bacteria - Disinfectant- an agent used to kill bacteria
- Normal flora-non-pathogenic bacteria that live on
human skin and mucous membranes - Pathogen-bacteria that cause disease
- Spectrum of activity- a products range of
antimicrobial activity
3CLASSIFICATION OF BACTERIA
- I. Shape
- Spherical (cocci)
- single cells (micrococci)
- pairs (diplococci)
- clusters (staphylococci)
- chains (streptococci)
- cubical groups (sarcinae)
- Rod-like (bacilli)
- oval shapes (coccobacilli)
- chains (streptobacilli)
- Spiral (spirochetes)
- rigid (spirilla)
- flexible (spirochetes)
- curved (vibrios)
- II. Stain
- (gram-stain)
- gram-positive (stains blue)
- gram-negative (stains pink)
4COMMON EXAMPLES
- Gram-positive aerobes
- streptococcus pneumoniae
- pericarditis,pneumonia,acute sinusitis,
meningitis, otitis media, septicemia - enterococcus faecalis
- burn wound sepsis, infective
endocarditis - staphylococcus aureus
- pneumonia, cellulitis, boils, toxic
shock, postoperstive bone and joint infections,
peritonitis, styes, suppurative conjunctivitis, - staphylococcus epidermis
- human bites,burns,IV line infections,
postoperative bone and joint infections - bacillus anthracis
- anthrax
- corynebacterium diphtheriae
- pharyngitis, tonsilitis, diphtheria
- streptococcus agalactiae (group B
streptococcus) - bacterial sepsis and meningitis in
newborns, endometritis and fever in postpartum - streptococcus pyogenes (group A
streptococcus) - diabetic foot ulcers, pharyngitis,
tonsilitis, burns, cellulitis, decubitus ulcers,
impetigo, toxic shock, necrotizing fasciitis,
scarlet fever, rheumatic fever - Gram-positive anaerobes
- clostridium difficile
5- Gram-negative aerobes
neisseria meningitidis - meningitis
- escherichia coli
- urinary tract infections,
pyelonephritis, septicemia, gastroenteritis,
peritonitis - neisseria gonorrhoeae
- gonorrhea, pelvic inflammatory
disease - pseudomonas aeruginosa
- puncture wounds, complicated
urinary tract infections (catheter related),
burns, pneumonia (ventilator related) - haemophilus influenzae
- pneumonia, meningitis, otitis
media, acute sinusitis - moraxella catarrhalis
- pneumonia
- klebsiella pneumoniae
- wounds, otitis media,
aspiration pneumonia - legionella sp.
- Legionnaires disease
- shigella sp.
- severe diarrhea, gastroenteritis
- salmonella sp.
6CLASSIFICATION OF ANTIBACTERIAL AGENTS
- Aminoglycosides
- B-lactams
- Penicillins
- Cephalosporins
- Carbapenems
- Macrolides
- Quinolones
- Sulfonamides
- Tetracyclines
- Miscellaneous Agents
- Vancomycin
- Clindamycin
- Metronidazole
- Fluconazole
- Terconazole
- Miconazole
- Nystatin
- Rifaximin
- Nitrofurantoin
7AMINOGLYCOSIDES
- Miscellaneous facts bactericidal
- concentration-dependent
killingthe bactericidal effect increases as the
antibiotic concentration increases - post-antibiotic effect
continues to inhibit bacterial growth for
several hours after aminoglycoside concentrations
are no longer detectable - higher doses at longer
intervals - often used in
combination with B-lactam antibiotics to achieve
antibacterial synergy to treat serious
pneumococcal and enterococcal endocarditis - no oral absorption
must give IV/IM - rapid renal excretion
- poor CNS penetration
- clinical differences
among the agents are subtle - Spectrumgram-negative enterobacteria
- no activity against
anaerobes - Therapeutic uses suspected sepsis, pneumonia,
meningitis, complicated urinary tract infections,
osteomyelitis, bacteremia, peritonitis - Drawbacks very limited by their toxic potential
ototoxic (irreversible) and nephrotoxic
- nephrotoxicity more
common than ototoxicity, often reversible, most
common in the elderly and those concurrently
receiving amphotericin B, cephalosporins, or
vancomycin - accumulate in the
proximal tubule of the kidney mild renal
dysfunction occurs in 25 of patients on these
drugs for several days or more - once daily dosing has
been reported to be effective and less
nephrotoxic - caution in patients
with decreased renal function - caution with other
ototoxic and nephrotoxic drugs - neuromuscular
blockade can occur with high doses, rapid IV
administration, in addition to neuromuscular
blocking agents or anaesthetics, hypocalcemia,
myasthenia gravis, and with blood transfusions
8- Gentamicin(Garamycin)IV/IM
- More active than tobramycin against serratia
organisms (septicemia) - Activity against mycobacterium and e.coli
- Used in combination with other antibiotics to
treat staph. aureus and certain species of
streptococcus - Serum concentrations are unpredictable after IM
administrationIV is the preferred route -
- Gentamicin ophth soln (Garamycin)
- Potential ocular irritation and burning
- Tobramycin (Nebcin)IV/IM
- Better activity than gentamicin against
pseudomonas aeruginosa (puncture wounds,urinary
tract infections,burns, pneumonia) - Some studies suggest it is less nephrotoxic than
gentamicinnot firmly established - Used in combination with other antibiotics to
treat staph. aureus and certain species of
streptococcus - IV is the preferred route of administration
- Amikacin
- Kanamycin
- Neomycin
- Netilmicin
- Streptomycin
- Paromomycin
9B-LACTAMS
- Miscellaneous facts
- contain a unique 4 member ring that is
essential for antibacterial activity - certain bacteria produce and enzyme
(B-lactamase) that breaks the ring and
inactivates the antibiotic - B-lactamase producing bacteris staph.
Aureus -
h. influenzae -
bacteroides sp. -
pseudomonas sp. -
legionella sp.
- drug interaction with probenecidprobeneci
d inhibits renal excretion of the antibiotics
causing higher, prolonged serum levels - anaphylactic reactions are common
- (urticaria, laryngeal
edema,bronchospasm) - Penicillins
- Cephalosporins
- Carbapenems
-
-
-
-
10PENICILLINS
- Miscellaneous factsbactericidal
-
Four Subdivisions -
Natural Penicillins -
Aminopenicillins -
Penicillinase-Resistant
Penicillins -
Extended-Spectrum
Penicillins - Spectrumbroad spectrum
- gram-positive
and gram-negative - Therapeutic usesoropharyngeal infections,
sexually transmitted diseases, pharyngitis,
otitis media, sinusitis, bacteremia, anthrax,
skin and soft tissue infections, mild respiratory
infections, uncomplicated urinary tract
infections - Drawbacks resistance
-
hypersensitivity reactions (occur in up to 10 of
people receiving penicillins) - bone
marrow depression -
gastrointestinal distress -
potential to cause seizures when given in high
doses to patients with renal dysfunction -
ticarcillin and carbenicillin can cause platelet
dysfunction -
11NATURAL PENICILLINS
- Miscellaneous facts
- highly active against gram-positive cocci
and gram-negative cocci - most common use is for streptococcus sp.
- Penicillin G Sodium (Pfizerpen) IV/IM
- Penicillin VK (Veetids) oral
- Penicillin G procaine
- repository form IM use only
- Penicillin G benzathine
- repository form IM use only
12AMINOPENICILLINS
- Miscellaneous facts
- broad-spectrum penicillins
- their spectrum is similar to but broader
than that of the natural and penicillinase-resista
nt penicillins - ineffective against most staphylococcal
organisms - commonly used for upper respiratory
infections, uncomplicated urinary tract
infections and otitis media -
- Amoxicillin oral capsules suspension
- semisynthetic agent
- better absorption and less frequent
dosing than ampicillin - better bioavailability than
penicillinmore stable to gastric acid -
- Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid (Augmentin)oral
chewables, tablets and suspension - clavulanic acidno antibacterial
activity, it inhibits B-lactamase by binding to
it and inactivating it-therefore increasing the
spectrum of activity of amoxicillin - clavulanic acid causes a high incidence
of gastrointestinal effects - more effective than amoxicillin against
staph. aureus, klebsiells sp., and bacteroides
fragilis - Ampicillin sodium IV/IM
- more effective than amoxicillin against
shigellosis sp.
13PENICILLINASE-RESISTANT PENICILLINS
- Miscellaneous facts
- active against gram-positive aerobes
- limited activity against
gram-negative and anaerobic bacteria - are not inactivated by
B-lactamase - less potent than natural
penicillins against organisms susceptible to
natural penicillins cannot substitute for
natural penicillins - complete cross-resistance
exists among the group - all are identical except for
their route of administration - commonly used for bacteremia,
skin and soft tissue infections, respiratory
tract infections, bone and joint infections,
urinary tract infections - ineffective against MRSA/MRSE
- Dicloxacillin(Dynapen)oral capsule
food decreases oral bioavailibilityadminis
ter on an empty stomach - Nafcillin(Nallpen)IM/IV
- semisynthetic
- metabolized by liver useful in patients
with renal impairment - associated with neutropenia in 10 to 20
of patients - multiple drug interactions
(warfarin,etc.) - Cloxacillin
- Methicillin
- Oxacillin
14EXTENDED-SPECTRUM PENICILLINS
- Miscellaneous facts
- also known as antipseudomonal
penicillins - have broadest spectrum of all
penicillins - used to treat serious infections
caused by gram-negative aerobes - ineffective against staphylococci sp.
- hypersensitivity reactions are more
common in this subdivision - all inhibit platelet aggregation
result in bleeding - Piperacillin
- Piperacillin/tazobactam (Zosyn)IV
- tazobactamno antibacterial activity,
inhibits B-lactamase therefore enhancing the
intrinsic activity of piperacillinincreased
gastrointestinal side effects - most potent extended-spectrum
penicillin against pseudomonas sp. - effective in treatment of nosocomial
pneumonia - Ticarcillan
- Ticarcillin/clavulanic acid
15CEPHALOSPORINS
- Miscellaneous facts
- B-lactam antibiotics
- bactericidal
- 4 generations
- classified according to their
spectrum of activity - each generation increases its
gram-negative activity but, loses activity
against gram-positive organisms - popular due to their low
toxicity and activity against serious infections - Spectrum gram-positive and gram-negative
- no activity against MRSA
- Therapeutic usesperioperative prophylaxis,
urinary tract infections, acute otitis media,
sinusitis, etc - Drawbacks most are eliminated via renal
excretionadjust dosages in renal insufficiency
hypersensitivity reactions (fever, maculopapular
rash, anaphylaxis, hemolytic anemia)
gastointestinal effects
hypoprothrombinemia - potential for nephrotoxicity
- cross-sensitivity with penicillins in up to
10 of patients receiving cephalosporins -
161st GENERATION CEPHALOSPORINS
- Miscellaneous facts
- oldest cephalosporins
- gram-positive activity basic
gram-negative activity (except enterococci) - widely used for perioperative
prophylaxis - used to treat klebsiella sp.,
skin and soft tissue infections, respiratory
tract infections, otitis media - Cefazolin(Ancef)IM/IV
- compared to other 1st generation
cephalosporins it achieves higher blood levels
after administration, has greater gram-positive
coverage and requires less frequent dosing - Cephalexin(Keflex) oral capsules ,oral
suspension
primarily used for
otitis media and respiratory tract infections - Cephadroxil
- Cephradine
172nd GENERATION CEPHALOSPORINS
- Miscellaneous facts
less gram-positive coverage more
gram-negative coverage than 1ST generation
cephalosporins - also active against B-lactamase producing
strains of haemophilius influenzae -
-
- Cefaclor
- Cefoxitin
- Cefprozil
- Cefuroxime
- Cefotetan
183rd GENERATION CEPHALOSPORINS
- Miscellaneous facts
- increased gram-negative coverage
decreased gram-positive coverage over 2nd
generation cephalopsorins - best CNS penetration of all
cephalosporinsvery valuable in treatment of
meningitis caused by meningococci, pneumococci,
haemophilus influenzae, and enteric gram-negative
bacilli - especially useful for gram-negative upper
respiratory tract infections, otitis media,
urinary tract infections and skin infection
empiric therapy for life-threatening infections
in which resistant organisms are the most likely
cause
treatment of sepsis of unknown origin in
immunosuppressed patients
initial therapy in mixed bacterial infections - Cefotaxime(Claforan)IM/IV
commonly used to treat empiric
gram-negative meningitis, serious bacteremias,
pneumonia, and community-acquired infections - Ceftriaxone(Rocephin)IM/IV
- longest half-life of all cephalosporins
allowing for once daily dosing - DOCneisseria gonorrhoeae
- Cefdinir
- Cefixime
- Cefoperazone
- Cefopodoxime proxetil
- Ceftazidime
- Ceftibuten
- Ceftizoxime
- Cefditoren
194th Generation Cephalosporins
- Miscellaneous facts
- newest cephalosporins
same coverage as 3rd
generation cephalosporins with additional
coverage against pseudomonas sp - high degree of resistance to B-lactamase
producing organisms - good activity against organisms that are
resistant to 3rd generation cephalosporins - commonly used for febrile neutropenic
patients -
- Cefepime (Maxipime)
20CARBAPENEMS
- Miscellaneous facts
- B-lactam antibiotics
- bactericidal
- Spectrumgram-positive cocci, gram-negative rods,
and anaerobes - broader spectrum than most
B-lactams - Therapeutic usesurinary tract infections, lower
respiratory tract infections, gangrene, sepsis,
pneumonia,intra-abdominal infections,
gynecological infections, etc. - Drawbacks anaphylactic reactions, seizures,
confusion, dizziness, gastrointestinal issues - Imipenem/cilastatin
- Ertapenem
- Meropenem
21MACROLIDES
- Miscellaneous facts
- mostly bacteriostaticcan be bactericidal
- newer macrolides-better absorption and
less gastrointestinal effects - Spectrum gram-positive cocci and bacilli
some gram-negative cocci - mycoplasma pneumoniae, chlamydia
trachomatis, legionella sp., corynebacterium
diphtheriae, campylobacter sp., treponema
pallidum, propionibacterium acnes, borrelia
burgdorferi - DOCgroup A streptococcal and pneumococcal
infections when penicillin cannot be used - Therapeutic uses
Legionnaires
disease, dental prophylaxis , chlamydial
infections, ance, diphtheria, pertussis, ocular
infections - Drawbacks
- numerous drug interactions erythromycin
inhibits the hepatic metabolism of other drugs
(theophylline, digoxin, corticosteroids,
carbamazepine, cyclosporin, lovastatin, etc.) - cardiac issuescauses QT prolongation and
torsade de pointes - gastrointestinal disturbances
(dose-related),skin rashes, eosinophilia,
tinnitus, dizziness, reversible hearing loss -
22- Erythromycin base (ERYTAB) oral tablet
enteric coated,
delayed-release tabs (do not crush) - DOCLegionnaires disease, mycoplasma
pneumonia and chlamydial infections - drug interactions with terfenadine,
astemizole, pimozide, etc.
dose must be decreased
with decreased liver function - pregnancy category B
Erythromycin
ethylsuccinate(EES) oral suspension - Erythromycin ophth oint.
- superficial ocular infections
- prophylaxis of neonatal ophthalmia due
to neisseria gonorrhoeae or chlamydia trachomatis - Azithromycin(Zithromax, Z-Pak) oral
suspension,oral tablets - semisynthetic macrolide
- less active than erythromycin against
gram-positive organisms - more active than erythromycin against
haemophilus influenzae and other gram-negative
organisms - concentrates in cells tissue levels are higher
than serum levelsincreased efficacy and duration
of action-less tendency to cause drug
interactions - once daily dosing
less
gastrointestinal issues than with other
macrolides - very useful in nongonococcal urethritis
caused by chlamydia, lower respiratory tract
infections, mycobacterium avium complex
infection, pharyngitis, pelvic inflammatory
disease, nongonococcal urethritis caused by
chlamydia, Legionnaires disease - pregnancy category B
-
- Clarithromycin(Biaxin) XL oral tablets, oral
suspension semisynthetic macrolide - same spectrum as erythromycin more potent
- enhanced activity against haemophilus influenzae
and mycobacterium avium complex
23QUINOLONES
- Miscellaneous facts
- bactericidal (concentration dependent)
- 4 generations each generation adds
coverage for a new group of pathogens - different mechanism of action --
thus, no cross resistance with other classes of
antibiotics - produce a false-positive urine
screening result for opiates when using a
commercially available immunoassay kit - Spectrum highly active against gram-negative
aerobes gram-positive activity - no activity for most anaerobes
-
-
- Therapeutic uses
- urinary tract infections, lower
respiratory tract infections, sinusitis, otitis
media, infectious diarrhea, prostatitis, empiric
use in febrile neutropenic patients - Drawbacks
- relatively free of side effects and
toxicity - phototoxicity
- not recommended in children under 18 years
of age (cartilage malformations were found in
studies in immature animals),tendon rupture,
cardiac QT prolongation( associated with 2nd and
3rd generations), CNS stimulation, hypoglycemia,
seizures, anaphylactic reactions,
pseudomembraneous colitis, can cause exacerbation
of myasthenia gravis
multiple drug interactions theophylline,
antacids, iron, multivitamins, warfarin, NSAIDs
(potential to increase risk of seizure),
antiarrhythmic drugs - pregnancy category C
-
241st GENERATION QUINOLONES
- Miscellaneous facts
bactericidal - gram-negative coverage (excluding
pseudomonas)
limited use due to the development of bacterial
resistance - poor oral availability limits its systemic
use - common uses include urinary tract
infections - Nalidixic acid
-
-
252nd GENERATION QUINOLONES(FLUOROQUINOLONES)
- Miscellaneous facts
- bactericidal
- increased gram-negative coverage
(including pseudomonas), gram-positive cocci, and
mycobacteria - addition of fluorine ion to the
quinolone structure fluoroquinolones - QT prolongation and torsade de pointes
- Ciprofloxacin (cipro)oral tablets/IV
- good penetration into boneuseful in
osteomyelitis - urinary tract infections, lower
respiratory tract infections, sinusitis, empiric
use in febrile neutropenia, typhoid fever,
infectious diarrhea, prostatitis, bacterial
conjunctivitis, corneal ulcers, nosocomial
pneumonia - indicated for use in mycobacterium avium
complex in patients with AIDS
262nd GENERATION QUINOLONES(FLUOROQUINOLONES)
- used in combination with other drugs to
treat multi-drug-resistant tuberculosis - most potent flouruquinolone against
pseudomonas aeruginosa - no longer drug of choice for neisseria
gonorrhoeae (becoming resistant) - absolute contraindication tendon pain,
tendon rupture, tendonitis - oral dosage
equivalent IV dosage - 250mg q12h
200mg IV q12h - 500mg q12h
400mg IV q12h - 750mg q12h
400mg IV q8h - Ofloxacin (Floxin,Ocuflox)
- oral/ophth/otic use
- less potent than ciprofloxacn against most
gram-negative bacteria - most active 2nd generation against
chlamydia trachomatis - Norfloxacin (Noroxin, Chibroxin)
273rd GENERATION QUINOLONES(FLUOROQUINOLONES)
- Miscellaneous facts
QT prolongation
bactericidal - extended gram-positive coverage
(particularly against penicillin-sensitive and
penicillin-resistant streptococcus pneumoniae,
mycoplasma pneumoniae chlamydia pneumoniae) - gram-negative coverage (including pseudomonas
sp.) - decrease dosage in renal impairment
- treatment of community-acquired
pneumonia, acute sinusitis, acute exacerbations
of chronic bronchitis, bacterial conjunctivitis -
- Gatifloxacin
- ophthalmic, bacterial conjunctivitis
- Levofloxacin
- oral, IV, ophthalmic
- less QT prolongation than with other
fluoroquinolones - Moxifloxacin
- oral,IV, ophthalmic
- not used for urinary tract infections
- approved for treatment of complicated
intra-abdominal infections
284th GENERATION QUINOLONES(FLUOROQUINOLONES)
- Miscellaneous facts
- bactericidal
- gram-positive gram-negative
- significant coverage against
anaerobes - Trovafloxacin (Trovan)
- restricted by FDA to serious
life-or-limb-threatening infections due to
serious drug induced hepatic adverse effects - BLACK BOX WARNING
- treatment restriction limitationshospita
ls and long term care facilities - liver injury leading to liver
transplantation and or death
29SULFONAMIDES
- Miscellaneous facts
bacteriostatic - Spectrum mostly gram-positive, some
gram-negatives - also activity against certain strains of
chlamydia trachomatis, nocarida, actinomyces,
bacillus anthracis - Therapeutic uses animal and human bites, urinary
tract infections, otitis media, chronic
bronchitis, travelers diarrhea, sexually
transmitted bacterial infections, ocular
infections and burns - Drawbacksphotosensitivity, can cause
Stevens-Johnson syndrome, hypersensitivity
reactions, blood dyscrasias, caution in patients
with G6PD deficiency (can cause acute hemolysis),
crystalluria, hematuria - drug interactions with phenytoin, oral
anticoagulants, sulfonylureas - cross-allerginicity between the individual
sulfonamides - discontinue at first sign of skin rash or
other reaction - SMZ/TMP(Bactrim,BactrimDS)
- (sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim)-gtsynergistic
combination - bacteriostatic-in combination with
trimethoprimbactericidal - DOCtreatment and prophylaxis of
pneumocystis carinii - useful in acute gonococcal urethritis, acute
exacerbation of chronic bronchitis - Sodium Sulfacetamide 10 ophth soln
- Used to treat conjunctivitis or superficial
bacterial eye infections,corneal ulcers - can cause a delay in corneal wound
healing - local irritation, burning, stinging
- Silver sulfadiazine1 cream(Silvadene)
- bactericidal
30TETRACYCLINES
- Miscellaneous uses
- bacteriostatic
- cross-resistance with the group is
extensive - Spectrum gram-negative gram-positive
- broad spectrum
agentscoverage includes spirochetes, rickettsia,
mycoplasma pneumonia, chlamydia sp., certain
protozoa species - Therapeutic uses
DOCrickettsial (Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever),
chlamydial, mycoplasmal infections, anthrax
frequently
used for acne and periodontitis - useful alternative to penicillin in
treatment of anthrax, syphilis, gonorrhea, Lyme
disease, and h. influenzae respiratory infections - Drawbacks photosensitivity
gastrointestinal
distress, hypersensitivity reactions, hepatoxic
(especially in pregnant women), pregnancy
category D, tooth discoloration (binds to calcium
in teeth bones-enamel hypoplasia can also
occur), not recommended in childrenlt8 years old,
cannot give with antacids or milk, cannot use
tetracycline after expiration date(causes renal
tubular dysfunction which can lead to renal
failure), take with fluids to avoid esophageal
irritation - Doxycycline (Vibramycin) oral tablets
- excreted mainly in feces very useful in
patients with poor renal function - Minocycline
- Tetracycline
31MISCELLANEOUS AGENTS
- Vancomycin (Vancocin)IV peaks20-40mcg/ml
- Miscellaneous facts bactericidal
troughs5-15mcg/ml - very useful in patients
allergic to penicillins or cepphalosporins - Spectrum gram-positive organisms including
MRSA/MRSE and enterococci - Therapeutic usesserious infectionsendocarditis,
osteomyelitis, staphylococcal pneumonia,
treatment of pseudomembranous colitis caused by
c.difficile or s.aureus enterocolitis - oral form used only for c. difficile
- Drawbacks ototoxicit y
increased ototoxicity
nephrotoxicity when given with other ototoxic and
nephrotoxic drugs - monitor blood levels
hypersensitivity reactions
facial
flushing and hypotension with too rapid infusion
of the drug (red man syndrome) - Clindamycin (Cleocin)oral/IV/IM
- Miscellaneous facts bacteriostatic
cross resistance with
macrolides is common - reserve for serious infections in
patients with penicillin allergies - does not diffuse into cerebrospinal
fluiddo not use for meningitis - Spectrummost gram-positive many anaerobic
organisms - bacteroides fragilis
- Therapeutic uses skin, respiratory tract, and
soft tissue infections caused by staphylococci,
pneumococci, and streptococci, dental infections,
acne, bone joint infections, bacterial
vaginosis - Drawbacks limited by its toxicities
gastrointestinal issues, blood dyscrasias,
Stevens-Johnson syndrome
dose must be
decreased with impaired hepatic function
potentiates
the effects of neuromuscular blocking agents - BLACK BOX WARNING
- first antibiotic to be associated with
pseudomembraneous colitis - c. difficile associated diarrhea
(pesudomembranous colitis)
32 - Metronidazole(Flagyl) oral/IV
- Miscellaneous factsantibacterial and
antiprotozoal agent -
amebicideamebicidal and trichomonacidal - Spectrumanaerobic gram-positive and anaerobic
gram-negative - certain protozoan parasites
(trichomonas vaginalis, entamoeba histolyticass,
giardia lamblia,etc.)
DOCc.difficile, bacterial
vaginosis (gardnerella vaginalis), c. tetani - Therapeutic usesamebic dysentery, giardiasis,
trichomoniasis, intra-abdominal, pelvic, soft
tissue, periodontal, and odontogenic infections,
lung abscess, acne, meningitis, bacterial
septicemia, lower respiratory tract infections,
endocarditis - Drawbacks hepatic metabolism-dosage adjustment
in patients with liver dysfunction - gastrointestinal distress, headache, dark
coloration of urine, leukopenia, dizziness,
ataxia disulfiram-like reaction with ethanol
inhibits warfarin
metabolism-increased bleeding
metallic taste - use cautiously in pregnancy (avoid in
first trimester) - drug interactions warfarin, phenytoin,
phenobarbital, cimetidine, lithium, etc. - absolute contraindication in breast
feeding
use with caution in patients with evidence
of or history of hematological disease - Fluconazole(Diflucan) oral tablet
- Miscellaneous facts azole antifungal agent
fungistatic - Spectrumactive against many fungi, including
yeasts, dermatophytes, actinomycegtes, and some
phycomycetes, cryptococcus, candida, aspergillis - Therapeutic usesvaginal candidiasis,
oropharyngeal and esophageal candidiasis,
systemic candida infections and cryptococcal
meningitis - DOCcryptococcal meningitis
- Drawbacksgastrointestinal disturbances, skin
rashes, hepatic necrosis, Stevens-Johnson
syndrome, anaphylaxis, alopecia
multiple drug
interactions phenytoin, cyclosporine,
warfarin,sulfonylureas, etc
pregnancy
category C
33- Terconazole cream (vaginal)
- Miscellaneous facts fungicidal
- Spectrumcandida albicans
- active against dermatophytes, yeasts, and at high
concentrations gram-positive gram-negative
bacteria - Therapeutic uses complicated and uncomplicated
vulvovaginal candidiasis - Drawbacks pruritis, irritation-vulvovaginal
burning, headache, body pain
pregnancy category C (not
recommended during first trimester) - Miconazole cream 2
Miscellaneous facts imidazole
antifungal agent
fungistatic
topical or intravaginal use - Spectrumbroad spectrum
blastomyces
dermatitidis, candida sp., cryptococcus
neoformans, coccidioides immitis, histoplasma
capsulatum, paracoccidioides brasiliensis,
sporothrix schenckii - Therapeutic uses for topical and vaginal fungal
infections
(vaginal candidiasis,
tinea infections, cutaneous candidiasis) - Drawbacks pregnancy category C
- Nystatin cream
- Miscellaneous facts antifungal agent
- fungicidal and fungistatic
- Spectrum primary activity against candida sp.
ineffective against bacteria, protozoa,
trichomonads, and viruses - Therapeutic uses treatment of oropharyngeal,
cutaneous, mucocutaneous and vulvovaginal
candidiasis - poor oral absorption, good
local activitygreat choice for oral and
esophageal candida infections -
- Drawbacks oral form causes gastrointestinal
distress
34- Rifaximin(Xifaxan) oral tablets
- Miscellaneous facts rifamycin antibiotic
- non-systemically
absorbed-no significant drug interactions - Spectrum gram-positive, gram-negative, aerobes,
anaerobes - Therapeutic uses Travelers diarrhea caused by
non-invasive strains of e.coli - Drawbacks do not administer to patients with
diarrhea complicated by fever or blood in the
stools - flatulence, headache,
abdominal pain, nausea, constipation, pyrexia - caution in patients allergic
to any of the rifamycin antimicrobial agents - not for use in children under
12 years of age - pregnancy category Cif
necessaryonly in 2nd and 3rd trimesters - poor GI absorption-no
systemic bioavailability-no drug interactions - 200mg tid for 3 days
- Loperamide(Imodium) oral capsules
- Miscellaneous facts synthetic antidiarrheal for
oral use
prolongs transit time of the
intestinal contents (decreases peristalsis),
reduces daily fecal volume, increases viscosity
and bulk density---diminished loss of fluids and
electrolytes - Spectrum
35- Nitrofurantoin
- Miscellaneous facts bacteriostatic-can be
bactericidal in high concentrations
urinary tract antiseptic/bladder
antiseptic - concentrates in the renal tubules and bladder
doesnt achieve blood levels high enough to treat
systemic infections -
- Spectrumgram-positive and gram-negative
- Therapeutic usesprevention and treatment of
uncomplicated urinary tract infections caused by
escherichia coli or staphylococcus saprophyticus - Drawbacksgastrointestinal issues fairly common
hypersensitivity reactions, headache, vertigo,
dizziness - polyneuropathy ---with high doses or
patients with renal impairment
monitoring
parameters BUN, CrCl, LFTs - Mebendazole (vermox) oral tablet
- Miscellaneous facts anthelmintic
death of the worm is slowcomplete
gastrointestinal clearance up to 3 days after
therapy - retreatment necessary if patient not
cured in 3 weeks - Spectrum ancylostoma duodenale (hookworm)
- ascaris lumbricoides
(roundworm) - enterobius vermicularis
(pinworm) - necator americanus (American
hookworm) - trichuris trichiura (whipworm)
-
- Therapeutic uses DOC GI hematodes
36- Bacitracin ointment
- Miscellaneous facts bacteriostatic potential to
be bactericidal - Spectrum gram-positive bacteria
- Therapeutic uses topical use to prevent
superficial skin infections following minor
injuries on small areas of the body - Drawbacks caution in patients with neomycin
hypersensitivity - maximum duration of use 7
days - incidence of contact
dermatitis is about 2 - Triple antibiotic ointment
- Miscellaneous facts (neomycin/polymyxin
B/bacitracin) - Spectrum gram-positive and gram-negative
(neomycin polymyxin B both have gram-negative
coverage) - Therapeutic uses superficial skin infections
- Drawbacks can cause allergic dermatitis
neomycin containing products can cause
allergic reactions in about 1 in 20 people
37- Neomycin/polymyxin/hc otic susp
- Miscellaneous facts antibacterial
anti-inflammatory - Spectrumgram-negative aerobes
- MRSA coverage
- Therapeutic uses superficial bacterial
infections of the external auditory canal - maximum use 10
days -
- Drawbacks caution in patients with tympanic
membrane perforation or chronic otitis media
risk of ototoxicity - allergic skin reactions
- pregnancy category c
38QUIZ
- 1.Which antibiotic is associated with red man
syndrome? - A.) clindamycin
- B.) vancomycin
- C.) penicillin
- D.) ciprofloxacin
- 2.Which injectable cephalosporin is the drug of
choice for neisseria gonorrhea? - A.) Ancef
- B.) Rocephin
- C.) Claforan
- D.) Mefoxin
- 3. Why should you not use tetracycline after the
expiration date? - A.) renal failure
- B.) hepatic failure
- C.) QT prolongation
- D.) diarrhea
- 4.Which antibiotic is not included in the DMAT
cache? - A.) Rocephin
- B.) Amoxicillin
- C.) Levaquin
39References
- Lacy C, Armstrong L,Goldman M, Lance L,
Lexi-Comps Drug Information Handbook, 15th
edition, 2007 - Beers M, Porter R, Jones T, Kaplan J, Berkwits M,
The Merck Manual,18th edition, 2006 - Shargel L, Mutnick A, Souney P, Swanson L,
Comprehensive Pharmacy Review, 6th edition, 2007 - Gilbert D,Moellering R, Eliopoulos G, Chambers H,
Saag M, The Sanford Guide To Antimicrobial
Therapy 2009 (39th edition), 2009 - Trevor A, Katzung B, Masters S, Pharmacology
Examination and Board Review, 8th edition, 2008 - Clinical Pharmacology, online version, _at_
www.clinicalpharmacology.com - Epocrates Online, online version _at_
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August