Aminoglycosides Flashcards
Aminoglycoside indications
severe sepsis, pyelonephritis, UTI, billiary, intra-abdominal sepsis, endocarditis
Aminoglycoside infections
gram negative, pseudomonas auerginosa but not against streptococci and anaerobes
Aminoglycosides MOA
Bind irreversibly to bacterial ribosomes and inhibit protein synthesis, bactericidal
Aminoglycoside adverse effects
Nephrotoxicity, otoxicity,
Aminoglycoside interactions
codynamic otoxicity with loop diuretic, codynamic nephrotoxicity with ciclosporin, platinum chemotherapy, cephalosporin, vancomycin
Aminoglycoside examples
gentamicin, amikacin
Aminoglycosides monitoring
For multiple daily dose regimen, one-hour (‘peak’) serum concentration should be 5–10 mg/litre; pre-dose (‘trough’) concentration should be less than 2 mg/litre.
For multiple daily dose regimen in endocarditis, one-hour (‘peak’) serum concentration should be 3–5 mg/litre; pre-dose (‘trough’) concentration should be less than 1 mg/litre. Serum-gentamicin concentration should be measured after 3 or 4 doses, then at least every 3 days and after a dose change (more frequently in renal impairment).
Gentamicin MHRA warning
MHRA/CHM advice: potential for histamine-related adverse drug reactions with some batches (November 2017)
Gentamicin contraindication
Myasthenia gravis, Ear issues