Antibacterials - Clindamycin and Tetracycline Flashcards

1
Q

Clindamycin is synthesized from …

A

the naturally occurring antibiotic lincomycin by treatment with chlorine and triphenylphosphine in acetonitrile

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2
Q

What is the mechanisms of action of clindamycin

A

Similar to that of macrolide antibiotics like erythromycin

inhibits protein synthesis by binding to the bacterial 50S ribosome

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3
Q

Antagonism and cross-reactivity between clindamycin and ____ have been reported

A

erythromycin

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4
Q

clindamycin is most effective against

A
  1. Aerobic gram+ cocci
    • –strep
    • –staph
  2. Anaerobic gram- bacilli
    • –bacteroides
    • –fusobacterium
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5
Q

Clindamycin can be used for …

A
  1. bone infections with s. aureus
  2. severe acne
  3. bacterial vaginosis
  4. lung abscesses and anaerobic lung and pleural space infections
  5. MRSA
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6
Q

Clindamycin is administered ____ with ___ and ___ to treat AIDS patients with ____

A

Clindamycin is administered IV with pyrimethamine and leucovorin to treat AIDS patients with Toxoplasma gondii

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7
Q

What do we see a lot with clindamycin treatment?

A

C. diff

Clindamycin knocks out all other organisms in colon except C. diff and then we get an overgrowth

C. diff is inherently resistant to clindamycin

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8
Q

Metabolism of clindamycin

A
  1. oxidative N-demethylation
  2. react with cytochrome P450 to oxide drug to sulfide

Both of these are inactive

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9
Q

Pharmacokinetics of clindamycin

A

Very readily absorbed from GI tract

Widely distributed among tissues - this is why it is useful for AIDS with CNS infection

Excreted in urine and bile

Elimination half life of 1.5-5 hours

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10
Q

Accumulation of clindamycin can occur in pts with …

A

hepatic failure … may need to adjust the dose

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11
Q

Tetracycline is a …

A

broad-spectrum antibiotic produced by streptomyces bacteria

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12
Q

Tetracyclines for stable …

consequences?

A

chelates with polyvalent metal ions such as Ca++, Al+++, Cu++, Mg++

consequences
1. should not be admin with calcium rich foods b/c insoluble chelates are not absorbed from GI tract; should not be admin with antacids that contain multivalent metals (TUMS)

  1. should not be admin to children when they are forming their permanent teeth, b/c chelate calcium during formation of teeth resulting in permanently brown or grey teeth
  2. pain on injection is caused by formation of insoluble calcium complexes (minimize pain by injection with EDTA which chelates the calcium)
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13
Q

WRT tetracycline, the hydrogen on the amine-bearing carbon atom is …, resulting in …

A

acidic, resulting in enolization and epimerization

this is an inactive product

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14
Q

Dehydration

A

tertiary, benzylic hydroxyl group at C6 has an antiperiplanar relationship with the proton at C5a and is set up for elimination

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15
Q

Epianhydrotetracycline is toxic to the … and can produce a ….. like syndrome, meaning

A

Toxic to the kidneys

Fanconi like syndrome

meaning that there is a failure of reabsorption in the renal tubules (PCT)

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16
Q

What forms of tetracycline are completely free of potential toxicity to the kidneys?

A

minocycline and doxycycline

b/c they lack a C-6 hydroxyl group

17
Q

Cleavage in base - Tetracyclines

A

undergo cleavage in base at pH values of 8.5 or above

the lactone product is inactive

18
Q

Mechanism of action of tetracycline

A

bind to the 30S ribosomal subunit and inhibit bacterial protein synthesis by blocking the attachment of the aminoacyl-tRNA to the A site of the ribosome resulting in termination of peptide chain growth

19
Q

Therapeutic use of tetraclines

A

Broad-spectrum antibiotics

  • Most common use is for treatment of acne
  • Drug of choice for chlamydia, rickettsia, brucellosis, and spirochetal infections

Also used for

  • anthrax
  • plague
  • tularemia
  • Legionnaries’ disease
20
Q

What are specific agents within the tetracycline class?

A
  1. Tetracycline
  2. Demeclocycline
  3. Meinocycline
  4. Oxytetracycline
  5. Doxycycline
21
Q

tetracycline

A
  1. generic and relatively inexpensive

2. food and milk lower oral absorption by about 50%

22
Q

demeclocycline - how is it different than tetracycline?

how is it similar?

A

it has a secondary hydroxyl group at C6 instead of the tertiary hydroxyl group, therefore, it dehydrates more slowly than tetracycline

food and milk lower oral absorption by about 50%

23
Q

minocycline - how is minocycline different than the rest?

oral bioavailability?

A

lacks C6 hydroxyl group and therefore does not undergo acid-catalyzed dehydration – so no potential for 4-epianhydrotetracycline mediated toxicity

oral bioavailability is 90-100%
absorption is lowered by ~20% when taken with food or milk

24
Q

minocycline is the only tetracycline that causes

A

vestibular toxicity (vertigo, ataxia, nausea)

25
Q

oxytetracycline - what is notable about its properties?

oral bioavailability?

A

most hydrophilic tetracycline

oral bioavailability is ~60%
– reduced by 50% when taken with food or milk

26
Q

doxycycline - synthesized from?
structural differences from other tetracyclines?
oral bioavailability?
half life?

A

synthesized from oxytetracycline

lacks C6 hydroxyl - does not undergo acid-catalyzed dehydration - no potential for 4-epianhydroxtetracycline-mediated toxicity

oral bioavailability 90-100%
– reduced by 20% when taken with food or milk

half life 18-22 hr which permits once a day dosing

27
Q

what is considered to be the tetracycline of choice? why?

A

doxycycline

no potential for 4-epianhydrotetracycline mediated toxicity and it produces fever GI symptoms than other tetracyclines