Chapter 33: Bacterial Infections: DNA replication, Transcription, Translation Flashcards

1
Q

-Floxacins MOA and clinical application

A

These are the Quinolones

Inhibit bacterial type II topoisomerases …inhibits DNA gyrase in Gram -

Gram Negative Infections

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2
Q

How do bacteria gain resistance to Quinolones (floxacins)?

A

Chromosomal mutations in genes for Type II topoisomerase

Alterations in membrane porins and efflux pumps

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3
Q

Rifabutin and Rifampin MOA?

A

Targets the B subunit of bacterial RNA polymerase - forming a stable complex with this prevents the elongation phase of transcription

BOTTOM LINE: inhibit transcription

RRRifampin –> RRRRna polymerase –> RRRRed blood Tb

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4
Q

Should Rifampin be used as a single unit?

A

No because resistance develops quickly

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5
Q

You should NOT use rifabutin with which other drug?

A

clarithromycin

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6
Q

What is the major use of rifabutin and rifampin?

A

Mycobacterial infections including tuberculosis

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7
Q

What class of drugs would you use for SERIOUS gram negative infections? Nemonic? MOA?

A

Aminoglycosides

end in “Mycin”

Bind to 16S rRNA of the 30S ribosomal subunit and mess with protein synthesis…causes mRNA misreading that will basically KILL the cell

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8
Q

Are aminoglycosides (-mycins) bactericidal or bacteriostatic?

A

BACTERICIDAL…THEY KILL THAT SHIZ

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9
Q

What are the most widely used aminoglycosides? (3)

A

Amikacin
Gentamicin
Tobramycin

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10
Q

What drugs used to treat gram negative infections have the adverse effect of ototoxicity?

A

aminoglycosides can cause ototoxicity (damage to hair cells)

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11
Q

Bactericidal vs. Bacteriostatic?

A

Kill vs. Stop Reproduction

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12
Q

What antibiotics could you use with Aminogylcosides?

A

B Lactam antibiotics

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13
Q

Three Mechanisms that cause Resistance to Aminoglycosides?

A

1) plasmid encoded production of enzymes that inactive aminoglycoside
2) Alteration of porins so that drug entry is impaired
3) Mutation of the drug’s target on the 30S subunit

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14
Q

Spectinomycin targets the 30S subunit and is used as alternative therapy for __?

A

Gonorrhea

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15
Q

Tetracyclines (-cyclines) target the 30S subunit and can be used to treat –?

A
corynebacterium acnes
h. influenzae
vibrio cholerae
spirochetes
mycoplasma pneumoniae
chlamydia
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16
Q

Which tetracycline can be used for malaria prophylaxis and for people with KIDNEY issues?

A

Doxycycline

17
Q

Which class of antimicrobial drugs can cause a bulging fontanelle, discoloration and hypoplasia of teeth, and growth stunting?

A

tetracyclines

18
Q

Children under 8 should not be given which antimicrobials?

A

tetracyclines

19
Q

If prescribing tetracyclines to a patient, what directions must you give about taking the medication?

A

Take these on an empty stomach because calcium products can interfere with absorption

20
Q

Patient has skin or subcutaneous infection, complicated abdominal infection, or community acquired pneumonia. What bacteriostatic 30S subunit targetting drug would you prescribe?

A

Tigecycline

21
Q

What is gray baby syndrome and what drug has a major risk of this?

A

Vomiting, flaccidity, respiratory distress, metabolic acidosis in newborns

Chloramphenicol

22
Q

Which drug targetting the 50S subunit can be used for tricky resistance strains because of increased affinity for 50S?

A

Telithromycin

23
Q

Erythromycin MOA

A

binds to 50S ribosomal subunit - bacteriostatic

24
Q

How would you treat Legionella pneumophila?

A

erythromycin

25
Q

Clarithromycin has increased activity against…

A

h influenzae

26
Q

Azithromycin has increased activity against ….

A

h influenzae and moraxella catarrhalis

27
Q

Clindamycin targets the 50S subunit and blocks peptide bond formation, but is associated with the overgrowth of ____ that can lead to colitis?

A

C Diff

28
Q

What is the only class of drugs that target 50S subunit and are Bactericidal?

A

Streptogramins - dalfopristin/quinupristin

Pristin–> pristine–> completely KILL

29
Q

Dalfopristin/quinupristin use? Do not use with what?

A

skin infections due to staph aureus or strep pyogenes

vancomycin resistant enteroccous faecium VREF

SSRIs because serotonin syndrome

30
Q

What drug targets 50S subunit and is used against Gram POSITIVE infections?

A

Linezolid

31
Q

What drug would you use to treat impetigo due to MRSA or Strep pyogenes?

A

Retapamulin (50S)