Notes on Roy's Antimicrobials Slides Flashcards

1
Q

Penicillins not inactivated by Staphylococcal beta-lactamases

A

Flucloxacillin, dicloxacillin

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2
Q

Is flucloxacillin effective against MRSA?

A

No

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3
Q

Differing spectrum among 1st-4th generations of cephalosporins

A

1st generation are effective against G+ bacteria.
As generations increase, G+ spectrum decreases and G- spectrum increases.
As generations increase, beta-lactamase resistance increases

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4
Q

Bacterial groups resistant to all cephalosporins
1)
2)
3)

A

1) MRSA
2) Enterococci
3) Bacteroides fragilis

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5
Q

Antimicrobials used to treat bacterial meningitis

A

3rd generation cephalosporins.

These have excellent CSF penetration

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6
Q

Anti-pseudomonal antimicrobials

A

Ticarcillin, piperacillin

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7
Q

Spectrum of flucloxacillin, dicloxacillin

A

Narrow. Anti-Staphylococcal

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8
Q

Amoxycillin, ampicillin spectra

A

Broad spectrum, but beta-lactamase susceptible

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9
Q

Common targets of amoxycillin and ampicillin

A

G- rods.
Enterococci.
Listeria

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10
Q

Carbapenems

A

Very broad-spectrum beta lactams.

Given parenterally

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11
Q

Main use of aminoglycosides

A

G- infections

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12
Q

Example of a G- bacterium that aminoglycosides are ineffective against

A

Salmonella, as this is an intracellular pathogen

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13
Q

Toxicity of aminoglycosides

A

High.

Nephro-, ototoxic

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14
Q

Streptomycin

A

Aminoglycoside, rarely used today except for TB (rarely)

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15
Q

Gentamycin and tobramycin

A

Aminoglycosides.

Wide G- spectrum.

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16
Q

Amikacin

A

Aminoglycoside.

Broader spectrum than gentamycin, but more expensive

17
Q

Quinolones

A

Bactericidal

Inhibit topoisomerase II, which allows transcription and translation.

18
Q

Anti-Pseudomonas quinolone

A

Ciprofloxacin

19
Q

Caution with use of quinolones

A

Animalstudies indicate that they can damage growing joints, so care when prescribing to children

20
Q

Macrolides

A

Large lactone ring
Binds 50S subunit of RNA, preventing ribosomal translocation.
Bacteriostatic, but can be bacteriocidal at high concentrations.

21
Q

What are macrolides used for?

A

G+ cocci.

Intracellular pathogens such as TB, chlamydia, legionella.

22
Q

Examples of macrolides

A

Erythromycin, azythromycin

23
Q

Chloramphenicol

A

Inhibits peptidyl transferase activity of bacterial ribosome, preventing chain elongation.
Quite toxic.
Used to treat Salmonella typhi

24
Q

Trimethoprim

A

Dihydrofolate reductase inhibitors.
Affinity for bacterial dihydrofolate reductase is several thousand times that of human.
DFR involved in formation of thymidine from folate.
Interferes with DNA synthesis

25
Q

Tetracyclines

A

Bind reversibly to 30S ribosome subunit.

Blocks binding of aminoacyl tRNA to ribosome binding site.

26
Q

What is metronidazole used to treat?

A

C. difficile.

Protozoal infections