Micro Chapter 20 Flashcards
1
Q
How do Penicillins work?
A
2
Q
Penicillins
- Number of Species
- Pen G vs Pen V
- Adverse Effects
A
- 50
- G- IM or IV, V- oral
- allergies
3
Q
Cephalosporins
- Explain the generations
- Adverse Effects
- Downside
- What can it treat?
A
- get better with each generation
- mild diarrhea and cramps
- very expensive
- 3rd gen treats meningitis
4
Q
Which medications effect the cell wall?
A
- penicillins
- Cephalosporins
5
Q
Chloramphenicol
- Structure
- Why is lab synthesis beneficial?
- What does it treat?
- Adverse effects
- Mechanism of action
A
- simple
- less expensive
- penetrates BBB to treat meningitis
- fatal (rare)- a-plastic anemia suppressing immune system in bone marrow
- blocks 50s so peptide bond can’t form
6
Q
Erythromycin
- Structure
- Mechanism of action
- What is it used for?
- Adverse effect
- Synthesis
- Why is this medication good for kids?
A
- ring structure (macrolytes)
- translocation movement of ribosome
- drug of choice after penicillin, it is less toxic
- mild gi discomfort (2-3%)
- can come in flavoured liquid form
7
Q
Streptomycin
- Mechanism of Action
- What is it used for?
- Adverse Effect
- What is it?
A
- changes shape of mRNA causing this area to not be read leading to the development of abhorrent protein (useless)
- was used for TB but is resistant now
- nephron toxicity (kidney effects); deafness
- amino glycosides
8
Q
Tetracycline
- Synthetic
- Mechanism of Action
- Adverse effects
- Benefit
A
- semisynthetic
- binds to calcium and blocks docking sites
- severe diarrhea, fungal growth in stomach, bad for pregnancy (causes liver failure in mom), brown teeth in kids, bone growth in fetus (skull)
- broadest spectrum- animals, mycoplasma, STD, Gram + and -
9
Q
Antibiotics that Effect Protein
A
- Chloramphenicol
- Erythromycin
- Streptomycin
- Tetracycline
10
Q
Rifampin
- What does it treat?
- Mechanism of Action
- Adverse Effects
A
- M. tuburculosis, M. leprae
- inhibits RNA polymerase
- hepatotoxic
11
Q
Quinolones
- What does it treat?
- Mechanism of Action
- Benefits
- Adverse Effects
A
- UTI, legionella, antrax
- inhibits DNA gyrase
- good penetration and potency
- attach to bones especially effecting cartilage development, bad for pregnancy, children and elderly
12
Q
Antibiotics Effecting Nucleic Acid
A
- Rifampine
2. Quinolones
13
Q
Polymyxin
- Mechanism of Action
- What does it treat?
- Route
- Adverse Effects
A
- ruptures plasma membrane
- pseudomonas
- topical- ointment
- kidney
14
Q
What antibiotics effect the plasma membrane?
A
polymyxin
15
Q
Metabolic Antibiotics
- Mechanism of Action
- Adverse Effects
- What do they treat?
- Comparison of Two Types
A
- attack PABA which forms folic acid
- third trimester of pregnancy
3 . UTI - Sulpha Drugs (earlier in chain) and Trimethoprim (later in chain)