Antimicrobial Chemotherapy Flashcards

1
Q

What is therapeutic index?

A

Ratio of toxic dose to the therapeutic dose (eliminates infection) - the larger the index the safer the drug is

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2
Q

Characteristics of antibiotic

A
Wide spectrum activity 
Nontoxic and nonallergic 
No undesirable side effect
Shouldn't eliminate normal flora 
Able to reach source infection 
Inexpensive and easy to produce
Chemically stable
Microbial resistance
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3
Q

What is MIC and MBC

A

MIC - minimal inhibitor concentrate - min [antimicrobial] needed to inhibit growth
MBC - minimal bactericidal conc. min [] needed to kill

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4
Q

What are targets for antimicrobials?

A
Cell wall 
Protein synthesis
Metabolic pathway
DNA
Membrane
Enzymes
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5
Q

What is penicillin

A

Beta-lactam - bactericida compound

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6
Q

How to beta-lactam work?

A

Beta-lactam ring inhibit cell wall formation by inhibit peptidoglycan formation

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7
Q

Example beta-lactam

A

Penicillin - 5 membered

Cephalopsorin - 6 membered

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8
Q

How does penicillin work?

A

Mimic D-ala D-ala
Inhibit formation peptidoglycan cross link in bacterial cell wall by binding beta-lactam ring to enzyme DD-transpeptidase
Enzyme can’t catalyse cross link = cell death

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9
Q

Use of vancomycin and how it works?

A

Effective gram +ve

Bind D-ala D-alanine on newly synthesised peptidoglycan - prevent incorporation into cell wall

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10
Q

What antimicrobial effect protein synthesis?

A

Erythromycin, tetra cline, aminoglycosides, fusic acid

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11
Q

How does erythromycin work?

A

Bind to 50s subunit block exit nascent polypeptide chains

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12
Q

How do tetracyclines work?

A

Inhibit binding tRNA to mRNA

Incorporated developing bones and teeth

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13
Q

How to aminoglycosides work?

A

Bind 30s subunit - misreading genetic code

Effective against aerobes and facultative anaerobes

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14
Q

How does fusic acid work

A

Bind EGF - prevent protein synthesis

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15
Q

Why are ahminoglycosides not effective against anaerobes?

A

Bacterial take up requires oxygen - dependent electron transport

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16
Q

What is a macrolide?

A

Bacteriostatic compound w/ macrocyclic lactone ring e.g erythromycin (used for those w/ penicillin allergy)

17
Q

Example DNA affected microbial?

A

Rifamycins, metronidzaole

18
Q

How does metroinidazole work?

A

Disrupt DNA - only effect against anaerobes
Activated in cells via REDOX enzyme (ferredoxin is e- transporter molecule)
Electron transfer creates anion - disrupt DNA helix

19
Q

What is Antimicrobial resistance?

A

An organism that is not inhibited or killed by antibacterial agent at [] achievable by drug at normal dose

20
Q

How is antimicrobial resistance caused?

A
  1. Chromosomally- mediated resistance - mutant selecting
  2. Plasmid - mediated - spread of resistant plasmid
  3. Plasmid-mediate resistance on transpoon - spread of resistant gene
21
Q

Antimicrobial resistance - how it doesn’t work

A
  1. Target structurally altered
  2. target overproduced
  3. drug is not activated
  4. drug is removed
22
Q

How does antiviral work? - are they common?

A

No - few in number and narrow spec

Need to interfere w/ viral machinery w/o affecting host