Antimicrobial Resistance Flashcards

1
Q

Sulphonamide Antibiotic

A

Bacteriostatic
Synthetic
Used for UTIs,RTIs,bactaraemia and prophylaxis for HIV+
Some host toxicity

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2
Q

Beta-lactams mechanism and examples

A

Interferes with the synthesis of peptidoglycan component of bacterial cell wall
Binds to penicillin-binding proteins
These catalyse a number of steps in peptidoglycan synthesis

Penicillin & methicillin

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3
Q

What is an antibiotic

A

An antimicrobial agent produced by a microorganism that kills or inhibits other microorganisms

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4
Q

Reasons for increased mortality, morbidity and cost from AB res.

A

Increased time to effective therapy
Requirement for additional approaches (surgery)
Use of expensive therapy (newer drugs)
Use of more toxic drugs
Use of less effective ‘second choice’ antibiotics

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5
Q

Aminoglycosides mechanism and examples

A

Bactericidal-targets protein synthesis, RNA proofreading causing damage to cell membrane
Toxicity has limited use, but AB resistance has led to increase usage

Gentamicin,streptomycin

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6
Q

Rifmapicin mechanism

A

Bactericidal
Targets RpoB sunbunit of RNA polymerase
Frequent spontaneous resistance

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7
Q

Vancomycin mechanism

A

Bactericidal
Targets Lipid II components of cell wall biosynthesis, as well as wall cross linking via D-ala residues
Toxicity has limited use but other AB res. Has led to increase usage

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8
Q

Linezolid mechanism

A

Bacteriostatic
Inhibits initiation of protein synthesis by binding to 50S rRNA subunit
Gram+ spectrum of activity

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9
Q

Daptomycin mechanism

A

Bactericidal
Targets bacterial cell membrane
Gram+
Toxicity limits dose

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10
Q

4 AB res. Mechanisms

A

Altered target site
Inactivation of antibiotic
Altered metabolism
Decreased drug accumulation

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11
Q

Altered target site

A

Acquisition of alternative gene or a gene that encodes a target modifying enzyme

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12
Q

Inactivation of antibiotic

A

Enzymatic degradation or alteration rendering antibiotic ineffective

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13
Q

Altered metabolism

A

Increased production of enzyme substrate can out-compete antibiotic inhibitor

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14
Q

Decreased drug accumulation

A

Reduced penetration of AB into bacterial cell and/or increased efflux of AB out of the cell - drug does not reach conc. required to be effective

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15
Q

Macrolides mechanism and examples

A

Gram+ and some gram-
Targets 50S ribosomal subunits preventing amino-acyl transfer and thus truncation of polypeptides

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16
Q

Quinolones

A

Synthetic, broad spectrum, Bactericidal
Target DNA gyrase in Gm -ve and topoisomerase IV in Gm+ve

17
Q

Sources of antibiotic resistance

A

Plasmids- Extra chromosomal circular DNA
Transposons- Integrate into chromosomal DNA which allows transfer of genes from plasmid to chromosome and vice versa
Naked DNA - released by dead bacteria into environment

18
Q

Spread of AB resistance genes

A

Transformation - uptake of extracellular DNA
Conjugation - pilus mediated DNA transfer
Transduction - phage (infection) mediated DNA transfer

19
Q

Other reasons for treatment failure

A

Inappropriate choice of AB
Poor penetration of AB into target site
Inappropriate dose
Inappropriate administration (IV vs Oral)
Presence of AB resistance within commensal flora

20
Q

Why are hospitals such strong selection pressures for AB resistance

A

Large numbers of infected people
High doses of AB

21
Q

Risk factors for HAI

A

High number of ill people! (immunosuppression)
•Crowded wards
•Presence of pathogens
•Broken skin – surgical wound/IV catheter
•Indwelling devices - intubation
•AB therapy may suppress normal flora
•Transmission by staff – contact with multiple patients

22
Q

Addressing resistance

A

Prescribing strategies – tighter controls, temporary withdrawal of certain classes. Restriction of ABs for certain serious infections
•Reduce use of broad-spectrum antibiotics
•Quicker identification of infections caused by resistant strains
•Combination therapy
•Knowledge of local strains/resistance patterns

23
Q

Overcoming resistance

A

•Modification of existing medications to e.g. Prevent cleavage (beta-lactams) or enhance efficacy. E.g. Methicillin.
•Combinations of antibiotic + inhibitor of e.g. Beta-lactamase. E.g. Augmentin.