Antibiotics - Antifolates, Fluroquinolones, & Anti-Mycobacterial Drugs

3 Different Drug Classes of Antibiotics

35 cards   |   Total Attempts: 188
  

Cards In This Set

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What different 2 enzymes do Sulfonamides and Trimethoprim inhibit to stop folate synthesis?
Sulfonamides inhibit Dihydropteroate Synthase. Trimethoprim inhibits Dihydrofolate Reductase.
What does the Sulfonamide drug class compete with in bacteria to bind the dihydropteroate enzyme?
PABA. Bacteria needs this, and Sulfonamides are structural analogs of PABA.
Why don't Antifolate drugs hurt human cells?
We only use exogenous folate (from diet).
You would use this sulfonamide to treat bacterial conjunctivitis of the eye.
Sodium Sulfacetamide Ophthalmic.
What is the one major bacteria that Sulfonamides are NOT effective against and most Fluoroquinolones are effective against it?
Pseudomonas.
What is known ratio for combining the drugs in Bactrim?
5:1 - Sulfamethoxazole:Trimethoprim
Describe 1 way that bacteria develop resistance to Sulfonamides and 1 way to Trimethoprim.
Sulfonamides - PABA wins out by either producing a dihydropteroate enzyme with less affinity for drug, or PABA is just overproduced. Trimethoprim - the DHF Reductase produced has a decreased affinity for drug.
What are 3 indications for using Bactrim?
Pneumocystis pneumonia, UTI, Nocardia infection.
What is a major Adverse Effect in Sulfonamides that affects roughly 3% of patients?
Allergic reaction to Sulfa-drugs. *Note: it may just be serum sickness and not to the drug, should be re-tested.
What is a key difference in coverage between the 2nd and 3rd Generation Fluoroquinolones?
2nd generation (Cipro, Levo) cover Psuedomonas while 3rd generation does not. And 3rd generation (Moxi,Gemi) have much better Gram(+) coverage
What is one method of resistance to Fluoroquinolones that bacteria have developed?
An active efflux mechanism and/or changed permeability - once drug gets in, it is pumped out and cannot kill bacteria.
What exhibits Concentration-dependent killing - Sulfonamides, Fluoroquinolones, or Trimethoprim?
Fluoroquinolones.
How are Fluoroquinolones eliminated - any exceptions?
Renally. Exception = Moxifloxacin - because of this you cannot treat UTIs with Moxi.
What is are the Pharmacokinetic advantages of Fluoroquinolones?
They are nearly 95% bioavailable and they distribute into many places - including bone (which is very tough to do). You can treat osteomyelitis because of this.
What is the main, serious adverse effect of using Ciprofloxacin if you have pre-disposed factors to it?
Seizures.