Antibacterials 1 Flashcards
Examples of Broad Spectrum antibacterials
eg, tetracycline, chloramphenicol
Examples of Narrow Spectrum antibacterials
isoniazid
Examples of Extended spectrum antibacterials
ampicillin, amoxicillin
List Cell wall synthesis inhibitors
Beta-lactam antibiotics,
vancomycin, daptomycin, bacitracin & fosfomycin
List Protein synthesis inhibitors
tetracyclines,
glycylcyclines, aminoglycosides, macrolides,
chloramphenicol, clindamycin, streptogramins & linezolid
List drugs that affect nucleic acid synthesis
(fluoroquinolones, sulfonamides & trimethoprim
List Miscellaneous and urinary antiseptics
metronidazole,
nitrofurantoin, rifaximin, polymyxin B, lactulose
Examples of Gram Negative
E.coli, Salmonella, Shigella, Pseudomonas, Helicobacter, Legionella, Enterobacter, Neisseria(meningitidis,gonorrhea)
Examples of Gram Positive
Staphylococcus, streptococcus, clostridium, listeria, actinobacteria, mycoplasma, bacillus, enterococcus
Penetration of blood brain barrier is influenced by
• lipid solubility of drug (eg, fluoroquinolones &
metronidazole are lipid soluble. Penicillin has low
lipid solubility)
• molecular weight
• protein binding of the drug
Disadvantage of combination therapy
some agents only act on multiplying bacteria. If
combined with another agent that causes
bacteriostasis they will be less effective
eg, -lactams + tetracyclines
• can select for multi-drug resistant bacteria
Mechanisms for synergism:
Sequential blockade (eg, trimethoprim + sulfamethoxazole) • Blockade of drug-inactivating enzymes (eg, clavulanic acid + amoxicillin) • Enhanced drug uptake (eg, increased permeability to aminoglycosides after beta- lactam treatment)
Broad Spectrum, definition uses and disadvantages?
Antimicrobial drugs which are effective against several
groups of microorganisms eg, Gram positive and Gram
negative bacteria
Uses
• Empiric therapy
• Mixed infections (multiple bacteria present)
Disadvantages
• Selection of multi-drug resistant bacteria
• Disruption of ‘normal’ flora
Narrow Spectrum, definition uses and disadvantages?
Antimicrobial drugs which are effective against only a specific group of bacteria Uses • Treating infections of known origin Disadvantages • Must know causative organism • Not useful for empiric therapy
Extended Spectrum definition, uses, and disadvantages
Antimicrobial drugs that are effective against Gram-positive
organisms and a significant number of Gram-negative
organisms due to chemical modifications
Uses
• Empiric therapy
• Mixed infections (multiple bacteria present)
Disadvantages
• Selection of multi-drug resistant bacteria
• Disruption of ‘normal’ flora