Antibacterials 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Examples of Broad Spectrum antibacterials

A

eg, tetracycline, chloramphenicol

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2
Q

Examples of Narrow Spectrum antibacterials

A

isoniazid

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3
Q

Examples of Extended spectrum antibacterials

A

ampicillin, amoxicillin

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4
Q

List Cell wall synthesis inhibitors

A

Beta-lactam antibiotics,

vancomycin, daptomycin, bacitracin & fosfomycin

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5
Q

List Protein synthesis inhibitors

A

tetracyclines,
glycylcyclines, aminoglycosides, macrolides,
chloramphenicol, clindamycin, streptogramins & linezolid

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6
Q

List drugs that affect nucleic acid synthesis

A

(fluoroquinolones, sulfonamides & trimethoprim

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7
Q

List Miscellaneous and urinary antiseptics

A

metronidazole,

nitrofurantoin, rifaximin, polymyxin B, lactulose

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8
Q

Examples of Gram Negative

A

E.coli, Salmonella, Shigella, Pseudomonas, Helicobacter, Legionella, Enterobacter, Neisseria(meningitidis,gonorrhea)

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9
Q

Examples of Gram Positive

A

Staphylococcus, streptococcus, clostridium, listeria, actinobacteria, mycoplasma, bacillus, enterococcus

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10
Q

Penetration of blood brain barrier is influenced by

A

• lipid solubility of drug (eg, fluoroquinolones &
metronidazole are lipid soluble. Penicillin has low
lipid solubility)
• molecular weight
• protein binding of the drug

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11
Q

Disadvantage of combination therapy

A

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

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12
Q

Mechanisms for synergism:

A
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)
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13
Q

Broad Spectrum, definition uses and disadvantages?

A

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

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14
Q

Narrow Spectrum, definition uses and disadvantages?

A
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
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15
Q

Extended Spectrum definition, uses, and disadvantages

A

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

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16
Q

The three major mechanisms of antibiotic resistance

are

A

Altered uptake of antibiotic eg, decrease in
permeability and/or uptake mechanisms. Increase in
multi-drug resistance pumps
2. Altered target eg, change in receptor site affinity,
modification of targeted metabolic pathway
3. Drug inactivation eg, bacterial production of enzymes
that inactivate drug