cell wall inhibitor Flashcards

1
Q

How Do Beta Lactams Kill Bacteria?

A

inhibit cell wall synthesis- inhibit the formation of peptidoglycan in which without it the bacteria would lyse

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2
Q

provides stability by virtue of highly cross-linked latticework structure.

A

peptidoglycan

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3
Q

Beta-lactams inhibit the family of enzymes involved in ___________

A

final stage of cell wall synthesis

transpeptidation or cross linkage

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4
Q

how are the enzymes involved in the final stage of cell wall synthesis detected

A

by penicillin binding proteins that covalently bind to the enzymes

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5
Q

Beta lactams lead to _____________ resulting in cell wall digestion and lysis of bacterial cell

A

dysregulation of autolysins

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6
Q

Beta-lactams are generally

A

bactericidal

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7
Q

3 mechanisms of resistance

A
  1. inactivation of antibiotic by a bacterial enzyme called beta-lactamase
  2. alteration of target site- low affinity of PBs
  3. decreased penetration to target site- such as gram negative bacili
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8
Q

B-lactam antibiotics work best at

A

time-dependent killing: lower yet more frequent dosing effective … just above the MIC but steady dose

  • they have a short half life
  • excreted by the kidneys
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9
Q

allergic reactions in beta lactams

A

common:

  1. immediate allergic rxn.- IgE mediated (less common)
  2. late allergic rxn (more common)
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10
Q

Narrow-spectrum
Low cost
Favorable therapeutic index
Excellent tissue penetration

A

penicillin

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11
Q

what do all of these have in common:

Staphylococcus aureus
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Streptococcus pneumoniae

A

they are bacteria that we no longer use penicillin to treat due to increase resistance issues

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12
Q

Main use is against penicillinase-producing Staphylococcus aureus
and it is a truly narrow-spectrum agent

A

oxacillin

  • synthetic penicillin created to treat a. aureus but there are some activity to streptococci
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13
Q

oxacillin active against MRSA?

A

nope

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14
Q

which is the only agent in the beta lactam family of antibiotics that treat MRSA?

A

ceftaroline

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15
Q
  • Similar spectrum of activity as penicillin plus
  • More active against enterococcus
  • Active against Listeria monocytogenes
  • Additional coverage of some gram negative bacilli: Haemophilus influenzae, some E. coli, Proteus species.
A

Amoxicillin

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16
Q

ampicillin is used to treat

A

meningitis secondary to listeria monocytogenes

17
Q

Due to the potential production of beta-lactamases, all Haemophilus isolates should undergo sensitivity testing

A

yep

18
Q

Clavulanic acid and sulbactam are potent inhibitors of many beta-lactamases
thus when combined with beta-lactamases they

A

increase the spectrum

By a complex interaction, it functions as a suicide inhibitor, meaning it serves as a target for the beta-lactamase enzyme thereby blocking the enzymatic breakdown of amoxicillin by beta-lactamases. This leaves the amoxicillin intact and able to inhibit the bacteria.

19
Q

Clinical Uses of Intermediate Spectrum β-Lactams + β-Lactamase Inhibitors: Ampicillin-sulbactam

A

intra-abdominal and pelvic infections

20
Q

Active against many gram negative organisms including Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Enterobacter spp.
Active against gram positive organisms such as streptococci

A

broad-spectrum penicillin

21
Q

Broad Spectrum PCNs: Addition of β-Lactamase Inhibitors

A

are used as well in intraabdominal infections but this one is preferred is there are resistant gram negative organism

22
Q

In diverticulitis, antibiotics should cover “mixed flora” – gram positives, gram negatives and anaerobes

thus what is a good choice

A

ampicillin-sulbactam

23
Q

spectrum of B-lactam ring anitbiotics are determined by the

A

side rings

24
Q

serum sickness is an adverse effect of beta lactams… what type of rxn is it?

A

it is a late allergic rxn thus we tend to see fever, rash, arthritis and circulating immune complexes

25
Q

moribiliform rash beta lactam adverse effect

A

delayed rxn

26
Q

what is the antibiotic that is preferred for Staph. aureus- methicillin sensitive

A

oxacillin

27
Q

antibiotic against Pseudomona aurginosa

A

piperacillin/tazobactam