FB - Principles of Anti microbial therapy Flashcards
<p>When must antimicrobial therapy be administered for it to be considered as empirical therapy?</p>
<p>After the onset of symptoms and before the definite pathogen is isolated</p>
<p>What is the goal of prophylaxis?</p>
<p>The goal of prophylaxis is to prevent the onset of an infection.</p>
<p>What is the main difference between bactericidal and bacteriostatic antimicrobials?</p>
<p>Bactericidal antimicrobials kill bacteria (bactericidal) while bacteriostatic animicrobials arrest the growth of bacteria (bacteriostatic) respectively at therapeutic drug concentrations .</p>
<p>Name AT LEAST 6 host factors that need to be considered before administering an antibiotic to a patient?</p>
<p>Any of the below.
1. Age,
2. Weight,
3. Renal function,
4. Hepatic function,
5. Drug allergies,
6. Recent antimicrobial use,
7. immune system status,
8. Diet, (Taking with dairy products or supplements)
9. Pregnancy status,
10. Genetic factors (e.g. G6PD status)
11. Medications that are being taken for other concurrent illnesses
12. Other co-morbdities</p>
<p>What does it mean when an antibiotic is said to demonstrate time-dependent killing?</p>
<p>The rate and extent of microbe killing depends on the length of time the antimicrobial concentration is above the MIC (T>MIC).</p>
<p>What does it mean when an antibiotic is said to demonstrate concentration-dependent killing?</p>
<p>The rate and extent of microorganism killing are dependent on the antimicrobial concentration. The pharmacodynamic parameter predictive of outcome for concentration dependent drugs is the peak concentration (Cmax/MIC).</p>
<p>What is the post antibiotic effect?</p>
<p>PAE is the suppression of microbial growth that persists even after the levels of antibiotic have fallen below the MIC.</p>
<p>Name 3 local routes of antibiotic drug administration</p>
<p>1. Aural (ear drops)</p>
<p>2. Ocular (eye drops)</p>
<p>3. Vaginal (pessary)</p>
<p>4. Topical (skin surface)</p>
What are narrow-spectrum antibiotics?
Narrow-spectrum antibiotics have coverage against a narrow range/selected group of microbes.
What are broad-spectrum antibiotics?
Broad-spectrum antibiotics cover a wide range of microbes.
What are super-infections?
Superinfections are secondary infections following a previous infection especially when caused by microorganisms that are resistant or have become resistant to the antibiotics used earlier
Name 4 mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance.
- Enhanced export of antibiotic by efflux pumps
- Release of microbial enzymes that destroy the antibiotic
- Alteration of microbial proteins that transform pro-drugs to the effective moieties
- Alteration of target proteins
- Development of alternative pathways to those inhibited by the antibiotic.