Fluoroquinolones Flashcards
Are fluoroquinolones lipid or water soluble?
Lipid soluble, so can penetrate BBB.
Do fluoroquinolones work in purulent debris?
Yes. Decreased activity in low pH.
How do fluoroquinolones work?
Prevent DNA supercoiling and replication by inhibiting DNA gyrase and topoisomerase. Mammalian topoisomerase is not affected by fluoroquiolones.
How is resistance to fluoroquinolones developed?
Chromosomal, plasmid is RARE.
Are fluoroquinolones bactericidal or bacteriostatic?
Bactericidal
Are fluoroquinolones time or concentration dependent?
Concentration dependent.
What do all fluoroquinolones work against?
E. coli, Pasteurella, and Staph. Mycoplasma and Pseudomonas. Atypical mycobacteria (like tuberculosis).
Used in human medicine for septicemic salmonellosis and Campy.
Enrofloxacin:
E. coli, Pasteurella, and Staph. Mycoplasma, Pseudomonas, atypical mycobacteria.
Pradofloxacin:
What enrofloxacin works on + B. fragilis, Strep, and anaerobes.
How are fluoroquinolones absorbed?
Well absorbed orally or by injection in most species.
How are fluoroquinolones eliminated?
Renal
Some adverse reactions to fluoroquinolones include:
Drug reactions/interactions. Arthropathy (horses –> dogs –> cat/cattle). Can cause seizures if given in high doses in short time period. Blindness/retinal injury in cats. Bone marrow suppression.
Public health concerns of fluoroquinolones:
BANNED in food animals due to rising concern of abx resistance.