Antibiotics Flashcards

1
Q

What are antibiotics?

A

Natural products of fungi and bacteria (so fungi and bacteria naturally produce antibiotics) - soil dwellers

- natural antagonism gives organism a selective advantage
 	- these natural products kill or inhibit the growth of other microorganisms

most derived from natural products by fermentation,
then modified chemically to : eg - increase pharmacological properties and increase antimicrobial effect

Some antibiotics are totally synthetic and not chemically modified - e.g. sulphonamides

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2
Q

What do we mean by selective toxicity as a characteristic of antibiotics?

A

We need an antibiotic that can target just the microorganism essentially and not the host

Due to the differences in structure and metabolic pathways between host and pathogen
Harm microorganisms, not the host
Target in microbe, not host (if possible)
Difficult for viruses (intracellular), fungi and parasites
Variation between microbes

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3
Q

What does a loss of flora lead to? What is antibiotic associated colitis?

A

A loss of flora leads to bacterial or pathogen overgrowth

Antibiotics damage flora, therefore clostridium difficile is no longer kept in check by this antagonism that is normally there therefore clostridium difficile grows

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4
Q

What do we classify antibiotics by?

A

Type of activity

Structure

Target site for activity

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5
Q

What is the difference between bactericidal and bacteriostatic?

A

Bactericidal:

Kill bacteria
Used when the host defence mechanisms are impaired
Required in endocarditis, kidney infection

Bacteriostatic:

Inhibit bacteria
Used when the host defence mechanisms are intact
Used in many infectious diseases

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6
Q

What is the difference between broad and narrow spectrum antibiotics? (type of activity when classifying antibiotics)

A

Broad Spectrum Antibiotics:
Effective against many types
Example: Cefotaxime

Narrow Spectrum Antibiotics:
Effective against very few types
Example: Penicillin G

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7
Q

What structural molecular feature can be found in penicillin’s and cephalosporins?

A

beta-lactam ring
its a square with a double bond oxygen and also nitrogen attached

the beta lactam ring is found in (all?) antibiotics

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8
Q

Name a 50S and a 30S protein synthesis inhibitor as an example in bacteria

A

50S inhibitor:
erythromycin
chloramphenicol (used in eye drops)

30S inhibitor:
Tetracycline
Gentamicin has small therapeutic margin

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9
Q

Which group of drugs inhibit DNA Gyrase in bacteria, therefore inhibiting the unwinding of DNA strands?

A

Quinolones

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10
Q

What are some examples of cell wall synthesis inhibitors in bacteria?

A

penicillin’s
cephalosporins
vancomycin

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11
Q

Does gram positive or gram negative bacteria have a large amount of peptidoglycan sitting on the outside of the bacterial membrane?

A

Gram-positive bacteria have a large amount of peptidoglycan

In gram-negative bacteria, there is a protective outer membrane, so antibiotics cannot access the peptidoglycan as easily

so you can only use certain antibiotics sometimes if they can get through to reach their targets

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12
Q

What does it mean when drugs are synergistic ?

A

the drugs work better in combination than alone

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13
Q

When do we use antibiotics? When can they be used inappropriately?

A

Treatment of bacterial infections

Prophylaxis - close contacts of transmissible infections
decrease in carriage rates ( increase in 80% in outbreaks)
e.g. meningitis
- prevention of infection e.g. tuberculosis

	- peri-operative cover for gut surgery
	- people with increased susceptibility to infection 	

Inappropriate use - viral sore throats - patient pressure

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14
Q

What are the routes of administration for antibiotics?

A

Community infections often treated orally by GP

Serious infections – hospitalisation - systemic treatment
e.g. i/v rapid delivery, high [blood]
often unable to take oral – vomiting, unconscious,
poor gut absorption due to trauma

?? i/v with perivascular collapse (e.g. septicaemia )
i/m injection - meningitis case

Topical - conjunctivitis, superficial skin infections, burns
antiseptic creams, heavy metal ointments

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15
Q

What are the two main types of narrow spectrum penicillin?

A

Basic penicillins e.g. benzylpenicillin (PenG), penicillin V
Active against streptococci, pneumococci, meningococci, treopnemes.
Most strains of Staphylococcus aureus are resistant. (ie MRSA resistance etc)

2.Anti-staphylococcal penicillins (chemically modified) e.g. flucloxacillin
narrow spectrum, G+ves, beta-lactamase resistant, less potent that PenG
Not MRSA

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16
Q

What is the difference between the basic penicillin’s Pen G and Pen V?

A

Pen G benzlypenicillin (G= gold standard);
not acid stable so you cannot give Pen G orally therefore i/v or i/m good for some G-ves as well as G+ves

penV phenoxymethlypenicillin
oral (more acid stable than penG)
less active v G-ves, but same activity v G+ves as PenG

17
Q

What are some other examples of broader/extended spectrum penicillin’s?

A

Broader spectrum penicillins
e.g. ampicillin
Spectrum of activity is similar to basic penicillins but also includes some Gram-negative organisms and also enterococci

Anti-pseudomonal penicillins
e.g. piperacillin (works against pseudomonas infections whereas other penicillins would not )
extended spectrum beta-lactam antibiotic
also G+ve, G-ve, anaerobes

Beta-lactam/beta-lactamase inhibitor combinations
e.g. co-amoxiclav (Augmentin)

Spectrum like amoxicillin plus activity against some Gram-negatives and Staph aureus

18
Q

What are some examples of Cephalosporins?

A

There are many of these agents often classified by generation. Some examples include:-

cefalexin:
An oral agent primarily used to treat UTIs

cefuroxime:
A parenteral 2nd generation agent with good activity against many Gram-positive and Gram-negative organisms

cefotaxime:
A parenteral 3rd generation agent with greater activity against many Gram- negative and retaining anti-Gram-positive activity

Ceftazidime:
A parenteral 3rd generation agent with a spectrum of activity extended to include Pseudomonas aeruginosa

19
Q

What does parenteral mean?

A

drug cannot be given orally ie intravenously etc

20
Q

What are some examples of aminoglycosides and what do we know about them?

A

This group includes gentamicin, amikacin and streptomycin
These agents cannot be absorbed from the gut and must be given parenterally
They are active predominantly against Gram-ve bacteria including Pseudomonas aeruginosa
These agents are nephrotoxic and ototoxic and serum levels must be monitored

21
Q

What is an example of a macrolide?

What is it used to treat?

A

e.g. erythromycin
(good as alternative to penicillin as people are allergic)
Used to treat Gram-positive infections esp. in those allergic to beta-lactams

Also active against
Mycoplasma pneumoniae and
Legionella pneumophila

22
Q

What are some examples of glycopeptides?

A

Includes vancomycin and teicoplanin
Active only against Gram-positive organisms
Parenteral only
Usually reserved for situation when other agents cannot be used e.g. against MRSA

23
Q

What are some examples of tetracyclines?

A
Includes oxytetracycline, doxycycline
Broad spectrum
Used mainly for treating
Chlamydia
Mycoplasma pneumoniae
Acne
24
Q

What are some examples of quinolones? (inhibit DNA gyrase activity in bacteria)

A

Includes ciprofloxaxin, moxifloxacin

Older drugs such as ciprofloxacin active mostly against Gram-negatives
Useful for complicated UTIs and gastrointestinal infections

Newer agents have better anti-Gram-positive activity
Useful for some respiratory tract infections

25
Q

Other agents as extra info

A

Trimethoprim – useful for UTIs. Combined with sulphamethoxazole as co-trimoxazole
Metronidazole – active against anaerobic bacteria (and some parasites) (generates free radicals?)
Chloramphenicol – broad spectrum. Used rarely systemically because of side-effects. Commonly used topically for eye infections
Fusidic acid – narrow spectrum, used in combination to treat Staphylococcal infections only.
Nitrofurantoin – useful for UTIs. (generates free radicals)
Linezolid – an oxazolidinone. The newest antibiotic reserve for multi-resistant Gram-positive infections
Daptomycin – lipopeptide with similar spectrum of activity to vancomycin
Tigecycline – glycylcycline (related to tetracyclines) – reserved for use against multiply-resistant Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria