Anti-microbial agents Flashcards

1
Q

give some examples of types of drugs that inhibit cell wall synthesis

A

B-lactams

Glycopeptides

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2
Q

Give 3 types of B-lactams

A

Penicillins
Cephalosporins
Carbapenams

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3
Q

give 2 examples of glycopeptides

A

Vancomcin

teicoplanin

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4
Q

How are G+ and G- bacteria different

A
G+ = thick peptidoglycan wall
G- = thinner wall but covered in an outer memb - more resistant
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5
Q

What is an issue with drugs that inhibit cell wall synth

A

only work when bac is growing/spreading - do not have effect on latent inf

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6
Q

what B lactam does not get broken down by B lactamase

A

Flucloxicillin

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7
Q

what makes up Co-Amox

A

Amoxicillin + clavulanic acid (B lactamase inhibitor) -> increases coverage

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8
Q

give 2 examples of cephalosporins

A

ceftriaxone, cefuroxime

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9
Q

what should be used against ESBL prod org

A

Carbapenams

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10
Q

Give some features of B lactams

A

renally excreted - dec dose if impaired
do not cross BBB
short half life
broad spec

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11
Q

what interactions should be considered with B alctams

A

penicillin has 10% cross reactivity with cephalosporins/carbapenms

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12
Q

what type of bacteria are glycopeptides esp effective vs

A

G+ve - usefull vs MRSA and C. diff

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13
Q

what antibiotic is esp effective vs pseudomonas aureginosa

name + class + method of action

A

gentamicin

Aminoglycoside - inhib prot synth

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14
Q

how do aminoglycosides work

A

inhib prot synth - prev elongation of peptide chain and cause mRNA misreading

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15
Q

what are the risks of using aminoglycosides

A

ototoxic and nephrotoxic - monitor levels

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16
Q

how do tetracyclines work

A

inhib prot synth

bacteriostatic - prevent bac from reproducing

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17
Q

what is a side effect of using tetracyclines

A

photosensitivity rash

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18
Q

who should tetracyclines not be given to and why

A

deposit in growing bone - done give to kids/pregnant women

19
Q

give 2 examples of macrolides

A

erythromycin/clindamycin

20
Q

how do macrolides work

A

inhib prot synth by interfering with translocation

21
Q

what are macrolides esp effective against

A

campylobacter, legionella, pneumophilia

22
Q

what can be used to treat meningitis if a pt is penicillin allergic

A

chloramphenicol

23
Q

what are some important side effects of chrolamphenicol

A

risk of aplastic anaemia and grey baby syndrome

24
Q

what are oxazolidonides very active vs

A

MRSA (G+)

not active vs G-

25
Q

what are some side effects of oxazolidonides

A

thrombocytopenia and optic neuritis

26
Q

give 2 classes of drugs that work by inhibiting DNA synthesis

A

Quinolones

Nitroinidazoles

27
Q

how do quinolones work

A

act vs the alpha subunit of DNA gyrase to inhib DNA synth

28
Q

name a common nitroinidazole

A

metronidazole

29
Q

name a class and example of a drug that work by inhibiting RNA synth

A

rifamycins - rifampicin

bind to DNA-dependent RNA polymerase

30
Q

how can you easily check the compliance of rifampicin

A

will turn secretions orange

31
Q

give 2 classes of drugs that inhibit folate metabolism

A

sulphonmides

diaminopyrimidines

32
Q

what makes up co-trimazole

A

sulphamethoxalene + trimethoprim

33
Q

give a common diaminopyramidines and what it is used to treat

A

trimephoprim - used vs community acquired UTI

34
Q

what are the 4 ways that a bacteria gains resistance

A

1 - inactivation of AB/ enzyme chemical modulation

  1. Reduced accumulation
  2. Bypass Ab-sensitive step
  3. Target modification
35
Q

what method of resistance fo ESBLs have

A

inactivation of Ab

36
Q

what mechanism of resistance does MRSA have vs flucloxicillin

A

target modification/ production of alternate target

encodes novel penicillin binding protein

37
Q

what is the mechanism of resistance for strep pneumonia vs penicillin

A

stepwise mut in PBP genes -> req inc concentrations of penicillins

38
Q

which bac are ESBLs most common in

A

klebsiella and E. Coli

39
Q

why would IV administration of an Ab be recommended over oral

A

if inf is serious/Deep/CNS

or if pt is not absorbing orally (eg sepsis -> drop in BP -> reduced perfusion of intestines)

40
Q

what are the types of antibiotics in terms of pharmacokinetics

A

T1 - Conc dendent killing - want C-max as high as possible
T2 - time dependent killing - maximize time above MIC
T3 - mix of 1 and 2 - maximize area under the curve that is over the MIC

41
Q

give an example of a c. dep killing antibiotic and how it should be given

A

aminoglycosides - given as big doses to maximize C-max

42
Q

give some examples of time dependent killing antibiotics and how the should be given

A

penicillin, cephalosporins, carbapenams

give frequently at lower doses

43
Q

give some examples of T3 antibiotics that are both concentration and time dependent killers

A

azithromycin
vancomycin
clindamycin