Antimicrobials I Flashcards

1
Q

What are the two antimetabolites? What are their mechanisms?

A

Trimethoprim: dihydrofolate reducates inhibitor; it prevents folic acid from being reduced: DHF –> THF.

Sulfamethoxazole: dihydropterate synthase inhibitor: prevents pteridine + PABA –> dihydropteric acid.

Often used together (Bactrim)

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2
Q

What is a complication of Trimethoprim?

A

Hyperkalemia in patients with renal insufficiency.

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3
Q

What three drugs are used for TB?

A

Isoniazid, pyrazinamide, ethambutol

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4
Q

What is the mechanism of Isoniazid?

A

Binds enol-acyl carrier protein reductase (InhA), preventing synthesis of mycolic acid; prodrug

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5
Q

What is the mechanism of Pyrazinamide?

A

Targets fatty acid synthase I in mycolic acid synthesis (no more protection inside macrophage).

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6
Q

What is the mechanism of Ethambutol?

A

Inhibits arabinosyl transferases involved in cell wall biosynthesis.

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7
Q

What can you do to prevent the neurologic symptoms of Isoniazid?

A

Co-administer with B6.

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8
Q

What are the side effects of Pyrazinamide?

A

Elevates uric acid (gout predisposition), centrilobular hepatitis

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9
Q

What are the side effects of Ethambutol?

A

Dose-dependent optic neuritis: loss of ability to differentiate red and green. Elevates uric acid (gout predisposition).

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10
Q

What are the two purine analogs? What is their mechanism?

A

Acyclovir, ganciclovir

Binds to enzymes, which produce inactive compounds, stopping nucleic acid synthesis.

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11
Q

What are side effects of Ganciclovir?

A

Neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, adverse CNS effects

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12
Q

What is Acyclovir used for?

A

HSV, VZV (higher doses)

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13
Q

What is Ganciclovir used for?

A

CMV, retinitis in HIV

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14
Q

What is the mechanism of Foscarnet? What is it used for?

A

Binds to enzymes, which produces inactive compounds, stopping nucleic acid synthesis (highly ionized- no oral utility, renal excretion)

Broad spectrum (HSV, VZV, CMV and RNA viruses, including HIV). Used for invasive HSV/VZV infections from acyclovir-resistant strains. Alternative to ganciclovir for CMV.

Renal/CNS toxicities.

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