Aminoglycosides Flashcards
General mechanism of action for aminoglycosides?
Irreversible inhibition of the 30S subunit of bacterial ribosomes
What are the 4 aminoglycosides?
Gentamicin
Tobramycin
Amikacin
Streptomycin
Gentamycin is most effective against what organisms?
Gram Positives - Group Strep, Strep viridians, Staph aureus, Enterococcus
Gram Negatives- E coli, Enterobacter, Proteus, Citrobacter, Serratia
Gentamycin toxicity?
Generally considered the most nephrotoxic
Tobramycin is most effective against which organisms?
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Slightly less active against other Gram Negatives
Amikacin is generally most effective against which organisms?
Generally more active against nosocomial Gram negatives
Mycobacterium - Mtb, atypical Mycobacteria
Nocardia
Streptomycin generally used for what organisms?
Enterococcus (only when gentamicin isn’t available)
Mtb
How are aminoglycosides eliminated?
99% renal elimination
What is the aminoglycosides’ efficacy dependent on?
Concentration dependent killing
The peak/MIC is generally proportional to efficacy. The time above the MIC does not matter for aminoglycosides.
Traditional vs. Extended Interval Dosing
Extended Interval dosing (one big dose once per day) is more effective, less nephrotoxic, longer post antibiotic effect, cost saving, and more intuitive for the concentration dependent bactericidal killing with aminoglycosides.
Two major toxicities of aminoglycosides
Nephrotoxicity and Ototoxicity