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Clindamycin, Chloramphenicol, Streptogramin, Oxazolidinones IDK2014

The document discusses several antibiotics including clindamycin, chloramphenicol, streptogramin, and oxazolidinones. It provides details on their mechanisms of action, pharmacokinetics, clinical uses, adverse effects, and resistance. The document contains a significant amount of technical information about these drug classes.

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Frankie Liu
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
67 views4 pages

Clindamycin, Chloramphenicol, Streptogramin, Oxazolidinones IDK2014

The document discusses several antibiotics including clindamycin, chloramphenicol, streptogramin, and oxazolidinones. It provides details on their mechanisms of action, pharmacokinetics, clinical uses, adverse effects, and resistance. The document contains a significant amount of technical information about these drug classes.

Uploaded by

Frankie Liu
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Clindamycin,

Chloramphenicol, Streptogramin, Oxazolidinones IDK2014


DRUG Clindamycin Chlorine-substituted derivative of Lincomycin (from Streptomyces lincolnensis) PK Oral : serum conc.= 2-3 ug/ml IV: 5-15 ug/ml (600 mg q 8 hrs.) 90% protein-bound Elimination: Liver, bile, urine Good penetration into most tissues except brain & CSF MOA Interferes with formation of initiation complexes & aminoacyl translocation reaction = inhibition of protein synthesis Identical binding site with erythromycin on the 50s bacterial ribosome subunit ACTIVITY RESISTANT: Enterococci G(-) aerobic pathogens poor permeability of outer membrane Clostridium difficile Mutation of ribosomal receptor site Modification of receptor by methylases Enzymatic inactivation SUSCEPTIBLE: Streptococci Staphylococci Pneumococci Bacteroides/other anaerobes CLINICAL USE/S Severe Anaerobic infections: Bacteroides With Aminoglycoside/Cephalosporin: for penetrating wounds of the abdomen & the gut Septic abortion Pelvic abscesses Aspiration pneumonia Prophylactic: for endocarditis in pxs w/ valvular heart disease undergoing dental procedure With Primaquine = for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (AIDS) With Pyrimethamine = for Toxoplasmosis of the brain (AIDS) ADVERSE EFFECT/S Diarrhea, nausea Skin rashes Impaired liver function Neutropenia Antibiotic-related colitis (caused by colonization of C. difficile)

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Clindamycin, Chloramphenicol, Streptogramin, Oxazolidinones IDK2014


DRUG Chloramphenicol MOA Inhibition of peptide bond formation at the 50 S subunit Blocks binding of the aminoacyl moiety of the charged tRNA molecule to the acceptor site of Ribosomal mRNA complex ACTIVITY CLINICAL USE/S ADVERSE EFFECTS BACTERICIDAL: 1. Typhoid Fever 1. HEMATOLOGIC 2. CNS infections - Bone Marrow & Red cell production Haemophilus influenzae suppression Meningitis Neisseria meningitides A. Anemia, serum iron, cellular Brain Abscess Bacteroides fragilis marrow 3. Anaerobic infections BACTERIOSTATIC: Dose related > 25mcg/mL 4. Deep ocular infections Treponema Reversible C. diphteriae ALTERNATIVE TX: Prolonged treatment (1 2 Rickettsia 1. Pneumococcal/ weeks) Pneumococci Meningococcal MOA: Extension of pharmacologic Chlamydia Meningitis effect Streptococci DRUG: Benzyl PCN B. Aplastic Anemia Pancytopenia E. coli S. epidermidis 2. Rickettsial Infections DRUG: Non-dose related Shigella Tetracycline Irreversible -> fatal S. aureus MOA: Idiosyncratic reaction Salmonella 2. GRAY SYNDROME in INFANTS: RESISTANT : Inadequate Glucuronyl P. Aeruginosa transferase Providencia > 50 mg/kg/day = accumulate Acitenobacter Flaccidity, vomiting, S. Marcesens hypothermia, gray color, P. Rettgeri shock, collapse 3. NEUROLOGIC Low-level Resistance: Optic neuritis, peripheral Mutants less permeable to the neuritis, headache, drug opthalmoplegia, confusion Chloramphenicol acetyltransferase: 4. OTHERS: RARE plasmid-encoded enzyme = GIT, Allergic reactions, inactivates the drug Superinfections

PK ABSORPTION: 75 90% from the GIT Oral preparation PALMITATE Parenteral preparation SUCCINATE Serum Level : IV = ORAL DISTRIBUTION: 45% protein bound Brain and CSF 65% Aqueous & vitreous humour Synovial, pleural, ascitic fluid Placenta, breast milk METABOLISM: 90% Glucoronide Conjugation 2% Deacetylation - reduce dosage in hepatic failure ELIMINATION: 90% Excretion in urine (small amount) Bile or feces

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Clindamycin, Chloramphenicol, Streptogramin, Oxazolidinones IDK2014


DRUG Streptogramins QUINOPRISTIN- DALFOPRISTIN Dalfopristin streptogramin A Quinupristin streptogramin B Quinopristin- Dalfopristin = 30:70 ratio Bactericidal (most organisms, except Enterococcus faecium) MOA PK Administered IV Rapid metabolism: o Quinopristin (0.85 hrs) o Dlafopristin (0.7 hrs) Not metabolized by CYP450 enzymes BUT significantly inhibits CYP3A4(metabolizes warfarin, diazepam, astemizole, terfenadine, cisapride, cyclosporine, non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors) Elimination: o Fecal route: 75 % o Urine: < 20 % Dose adjustments NOT necessary in: Renal failure Peritoneal Hemodialysis Dose adjusted in Hepatic insufficiency ACTIVITY G (+) cocci (inc. resistant strains of Streptococci) Staphyloccoci (Methicillin- resistant & suscebtible strains) PCN-resistant strains of S. pneumoniae E. faecium (not E. faecalis) CLINICAL USE/S Treatment of infections caused by staphylococci or by vancomycin- resistant strains of E. faecium, but not E. faecalis ADVERSE EFFECTS Infusion-related events: o pain at injection site o phlebitis o arthralgia-myalgia syndrome

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Clindamycin, Chloramphenicol, Streptogramin, Oxazolidinones IDK2014


DRUG Oxazolidinones MOA Prevents formation of ribosome complex that initiates protein synthesis : Binds to 23S ribosomal RNA of the 50S subunit PK Oral = 100% bioavailability Metabolism: o Oxidation = 2 inactive metabolites Does not induce/inhibit CYP450 enzymes Dose: 600 mg 2x/day Pear serum conc. = 18 ug/ml ACTIVITY Resistance mutation of linezolid binding site on 23S ribosomal RNA BACTERIOSTATIC G (+) pathogens: o Staphyloccoci, o anaerobic cocci G (+) rods: Corynebacteria, o Listeria monocytogenes BACTERICIDAL Streptococci CLINICAL USE/S Nosocomial pneumonias Community-acquired pneumonia Vancomycin-resistant E. faecium infxns. Skin infections Multiple drug-resistant G(+) bacteria ADVERSE EFFECT/S Thrombocytopenia - > 2 weeks admn. Neutropenia (in predisposed pxs. or pxs with bone marrow suppression)

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