ID - Abx Resistance Flashcards

1
Q

What mechanisms confer antibiotic resistance?

A
  1. Intrinsic- innate resistance- membrane impermeability (Gram-negative have a thick cell wall)
  2. Acquired
    i) - Drug inactivation e.g. Beta-lactamases
    ii) - Decreased intracellular drug concentration:
    • reduced permeability (pseudomonas has relatively impermeable out membrane).
    • drug efflux (Pseudomonas has pump for penicillins, cephalosporins, chloramphenicol, quinolones)
      iii) - Alteration of molecular target (production of low-affinity penicillin binding protein by MRSA and coagulase-negative Staph, altered cell wall substrate in VRE)
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2
Q

How do bacteria acquire resistance to antimicrobial drugs?

A
  1. Intrinsic (innate resistance, gram negatives have a thick cell wall)
  2. Sporadic mutation (potential for vertical transmission)
  3. Horizontal gene transfer:
    - Transformation: (Free DNA released from lysed bacteria)
    - Transduction: (Bacteriophages (viruses that infect bacteria) transferring DNA to other bacteria)
    - Conjugation: (Plasmids transfer of genetic material)
    - Transposition: (Transposons - small segments of bacterial DNA that can move independently between plasmids or bacterial chromosomes).
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3
Q

Why is antibiotic resistance a problem in ICU?

A
  1. Use of broad-spectrum antibiotics
  2. Indwelling devices breaching barrier defences
  3. Sick, vulnerable and immunocompromised patients
  4. Transfer between patients
  5. Bed management and isolation
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4
Q

What interventions do we use to minimise antibiotic resistance?

A
  1. Antibiotic stewardship:
    - pharmacy and microbiology input
    - Using local microbiological guidelines to guide empirical therap
    - minimise duration of broad spectrum Abx
    - narrow spectrum once sensitivities known
    - regular resistance swabs
  2. Prevention of nosocomial infection:
    - Line Care bundles (Matching michigan) to prevent device infection
    - daily sedation holds to minimise time of invasive ventilation
    - daily line reviews
    - patient isolation
    - SDD:
    i - non-absorbable oral paste: tobramycin, polymixin E, amphotericin
    ii - NG administration: tobramycin, polymixin E, amphotericin
    iii - IV cefotaxime for first four days
    iv - regular throat and rectal swabs for monitoring
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5
Q

What resistant bacteria are you aware of? What antimicrobials can you use to treat them?

A
  1. MRSA (PVL - MEC-A gene codes for low-affinity penicillin binding protein) - Mx: i) glycopeptides, ii) linezolid
  2. Extended Spectrum Beta-Lactamase (plasmid transfer, typically Klebsiella) - Mx: i) meropenem
  3. CPE (carbapenemase- producing enterobacteriaceae) - Mx: colistin, amikaicin, tigecycline
  4. VRE (vancomycin resistant enterococci: E. faecalis, E. faecium) - Mx: Linezolid, tigecycline

All should be managed by discussion with infection control for isolation of symptomatic patients and ensuring isolated care and good hand hygiene.

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