French Inhibitors of Protein Synth Flashcards

1
Q

antibiotics that inhibiting protein synthesis?

A

Macrolides , Tetrocyclines, Lincomycins, Aminoglycosides, chloramphenicol, oxazolidinones, streptogamins

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2
Q

antibiotics that inhibiting INITIATION of protein synthesis?

A

AGs,TCNs

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3
Q

antibiotics that inhibiting ELONGATION of protein synthesis?

A

Chloramphenicol, MACs (Erythro), clindamycin

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4
Q

Mech of action of MACs (Azithromycin)?

A

static - inhibit protein synthesis at same site as Cindamycin

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5
Q

How do bacteria become resistant to MACs?

A

alter target (50S ribosome), efflux drug, inactivate drug

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6
Q

How to administer Azithromycin?

A

PO on empty stomach

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7
Q

MAC absorption?

A

good PO (some IV avilable)

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8
Q

MAC distribution?

A

wide - goes to fetu. Accumultes in macs, skin, lungs, tonsils, cervix, sputum

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9
Q

Azithromycin metabolism?

A

not metabolized - biliary excretion

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10
Q

Dosing for Azithromycin?

A

QD - high tissue penetration & slow release

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11
Q

MOST common clinical use for MACs?

A

G+ cocci (Strep & Staph), Atypicals (Chlamydia & mycoplasma)

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12
Q

Adverse reactions caused by MACs?

A

GI disturbance, hepatotoxicity, prolonged QT interval

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13
Q

DDI with MACs?

A

Erythromicin & clarithromycin can inhibit CYP450

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14
Q

How do MACs cause GI upset?

A

drug (especially erythro) binds motilin receptor

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15
Q

Do all MACs cause DDIs?

A

no! remember ACE (Azithro is A-ok, but Clarithro & Erythro Cause Effect)

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16
Q

Mech of action for TCNs?

A

static - binds 30S ribosome

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17
Q

How are TCNs selective?

A

host cells have efflux protein

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18
Q

resistance to TCNs?

A

MDR receptors (efflux), proteins that bind TCN

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19
Q

TCN absorption?

A

PO (impaired by milk products)

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20
Q

TCN distribution?

A

Fetus!

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21
Q

TCN elimination?

A

Doxy/mino = hepatic, other TCNs = renal

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22
Q

Spectrum of use for TCN?

A

Broad

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23
Q

common clinical use for TCNs?

A

MRSA, Atypicals (chlamydia, mycoplasma)

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24
Q

ADRs to TCNs?

A

Teeth & bones, Super infections (fungal), yeast overgrowth, photosensitivity, liver/kidney toxicity, GI disturbance

25
DDIs with TCNs?
Antacids & Iron supplements (decrease bioavailability)
26
Mechanism of action for Clindamycin (lincomycins)?
statos - binds 50S ribosome
27
Route of absorption for Clindamycin?
PO (also IV)
28
Clindamycin distribution?
especially into bone
29
Clindamycin elimination?
heptaobiliary elimination & breast milk
30
Spectrum for Clindamycin?
narrow (G+ cocci & Anaerobes) choice in MRSA
31
ADRs to Clindamycin?
Superinfection (CDAD, pseudomembranous colitis), diarrhea
32
Mechanism of action for Aminoglycosides?
CIDAL - irreversibly binds 30S, requires O2
33
Resistance to AGs?
chemically modify AGs, decrease drug influx, change ribosomal target
34
AGs absorption? Route?
poor oral absorption, route: IV/IM
35
AGs distribution?
ECF, especially: renal cortex & inner ear
36
AGs elimination?
renal
37
AGs dosing?
once daily, narrow Therapeutic Index so requires Cp monitoring
38
AGs spectrum?
narrow (G- aerobes: pseudomonas & E coli, M. tuberculosis, enterococci)
39
ADR to AGs?
ototoxicity, nephrotoxicity (requires regular Cp monitoring)
40
AGs DDI?
PCNs irreversibly binds and inhibits AGs
41
Mech of action for Chloramphenicol?
statis - inhibits 50S ribosome (including mitochondrial ribosomes in bone marrow)
42
Resistance to Chloramphenicols?
impermeability, inactivation by bacterial enzymes
43
Chloramphenicol Absorption?
PO (also IV)
44
Chloramphenicol distribution?
wide - including CSF
45
Chloramphenicol elimination?
liver (glucouronidation) - neonates cannot process
46
Chloramphenicol Spectrum?
broad (G+/- cocci, anaerobes including Bacteroides, Atypicals)
47
ADR to chloramphenicol?
bone marrow toxicity (aplastic anemia), Gray baby syndrome (hepatotoxicity), GI
48
Mech of action for Oxazolidinones?
static - binds 50S, inhibits formation of 70S complex
49
Oxazolidinones absorption?
excellent PO (also IV)
50
Oxazolidinones elimination?
nonenzymatic oxidation & renal
51
Oxazolidinones Spectrum?
last resort - G+ (multi resistant)
52
ADRs to Oxazolidinones?
thrombocytopenia
53
DDI to Oxazolidinones?
inhibits MAO (hypertensive response, serotonin syndrome)
54
Mech of action for Streptogamins?
CIDAL - binds 50S & inhibits elongation
55
Streptogamin absorption?
IV only
56
Streptogamin elimination?
hepatic conjugation, biliary excretion
57
Streptogamin Spectrum?
last resort G+ & atypicals
58
ADRs to Streptogamin?
infusion related, inhibits CYP3A4