Drugs to Tx CAP, HAP, and VAP (Pneumonia) Flashcards

1
Q

What do penicillins inhibit and how?

What does this cause?

A

1) Bacterial cell wall synthesis by binding to the penicillin binding proteins
2) PBP binding inhibits peptidoglycan synthesis

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2
Q

What is the role of clavulanate when combined with amoxicillin and tazobactam when combined with piperacillin?

A

Inhibit beta lactamase

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3
Q

Which broad-spectrum penicillin/β-lactamase inhibitor combo is active against pseudomonas?

A

piperacillin and tazobactam

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4
Q

What is the clinical application of amoxicillin and clavulanate?

For piperacillin and tazobactam?

A

1) Community-acquired pneumonia

2) Community-acquired pneumonia, hospital-acquired pneumonia, and ventilator-acquired pneumonia

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5
Q

Which broad-spectrum penicillin/β-lactamase inhibitor combo is given orally?

IV?

A

1) amoxicillin and clavulanate

2) piperacillin and tazobactam

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6
Q

When should you adjust the dosage of ceftriaxone if the patient has renal impairment?

A

Never because ceftriaxone is not eliminated by the kidneys

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7
Q

What are the parenteral cephalosporins?

A

1) Ceftriaxone

2) Cefepime

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8
Q

What are the oral cephalosporins?

A

1) cefpodoxime

2) cefditoren

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9
Q

What is the MOA of the cephalosporins?

A

1) Bacterial cell wall synthesis by binding to the penicillin binding proteins
2) PBP binding inhibits peptidoglycan synthesis

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10
Q

What is the clinical application for cefpodoxime and cefditoren?

A

Community-acquired pneumonia for outpatient therapy

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11
Q

Why can cefpodoxime and cefditoren be used in outpatient therapy?

A

They are administered orally

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12
Q

What toxicity may arise with cefpodoxime and cefditoren?

A

Beta-lactam allergy

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13
Q

What is the MOA of the tetracylines?

A

Kills bacteria lacking cell walls such as Mycoplasma pneumonia

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14
Q

What is the tetracycline drug of choice for community acquired pneumonia?

A

Doxycycline

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15
Q

Why do you not want to use tetracyclines in young kids?

A

Will stain their developing permanent teeth

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16
Q

Why is it important to take tetracyclines will lots of water?

A

It can cause esophageal irritation and ulceration

17
Q

What are the macrolide drugs of choice for community acquired pneumonia?

A

1) azithromycin

2) clarithromycin

18
Q

The macrolides are most effective against what microorganisms?

A

Aerobic and anaerobic gram-positive microorganisms (beta-hemolytic streptococci, pneumococci, staphylococci, and enterococci)

19
Q

Which macrolide can cause epigastric pain and is a well known inhibitor of cytochrome P450 metabolism?

Which causes less GI pain but is also a cytochrome P450 inhibitor?

Which does not inhibit cytochrome P450 and concentrates in cells which slowly release bacteriostatic levels of drugs?

A

1) erythromycin
2) clarithromycin
3) azithromycin

20
Q

What are generally more effective than tetracyclines or macrolides for pneumonia, but should be reserved to minimize appearance of tolerance?

A

Fluoroquinolones such as levofloxacin, gemifloxacin and moxifloxacin

21
Q

What can the fluoroquinolones increase the risk for?

What population is most at risk for this occurring?

A

1) Tendon rupture such as the Achilles

2) Children and elderly

22
Q

What is given by IV for serious infections caused by susceptible organisms resistant to penicillins (MRSA and MRSE) or in individuals with serious allergy to penicillins?

A

Vancomycin

23
Q

What is the MOA of linezolid?

A

Binds to the ribosomal A site to prevent tRNA binding

24
Q

What is the clinical use of linezolid?

A

1) Treatment of CAP caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae

2) Treatment of HAP caused by S. aureus

25
What is the difference between linezolid and vancomycin in terms of pharmacokinetics?
Linezolid is orally active
26
What is the cause of most of the toxicities experienced by linezolid?
It inhibits monoamine oxidase
27
Aztreonam is useful against a wide spectrum of gram-negative aerobic pathogens such as?
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
28
imipenem is reserved for last resort therapy because?
It is active against many multi-resistant strains
29
gentamicin which is an aminoglycoside works by binding to the bacterial 30s ribosomal subunit and has what classic black box warnings?
1) Nephrotoxicity | 2) Ototoxicity