PRINCIPLES OF ANTIMICROBIAL THERAPY
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Penicillins
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β-Lactams. G+, easy G-, anaerobes. Bactericidal. Inhibit cell wall synthesis. Safe. Elimated via kidney, good for UTIs.
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Natural penicillins – G+, poor G-, spirochetes, destroyed by penicillinase. PenG and PenV. Penicillinase-resistant penicillins – Penicillinase producing G+ cocci, esp. Staphylococcus.
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Cloxacillin, dicloxacillin. Aminopenicillins – Broad spectrum, ↑ G- activity. Ampicillin, amoxicillin. Extended spectrum penicillins – addl G- activity, Pseudomonas.
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Carbenicillin, ticarcillin, piperacillin. Potentiated penicillins - Developed to inactivate β-lactamases.
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Clavomox, timentin. Don’t use penicillins in rodents and lagomorphs; elimination of G+ gut flora can lead to fatal colibacillosis.
Cephalosporins
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β-Lactams. G+, some G- (more with each generation), anaerobes. Bactericidal. β-lactam antibiotics. Inhibit cell wall synthesis.
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More effective against actively growing bacteria. Classifications – 1st generation cepholosporins include cephalothin, cefazolin, cephapirin, cephadine, cephalexin, cefadroxil. Activity against most G+, poor G- activity. 2nd generation cepholosporins - not very popular, same G+ activity, expanded G-. 3rd generation cepholosporins – same G+ activity, much expanded G- activity; cefotaxime, moxolactom, cefoperazone, ceftiofur (BRD, no withdrawal time).
Aminoglycosides
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1° G- aerobes. Some G+. Pseudomonas, staphylococcus, atypical mycobacterium (nocardia/actinomyces).
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Irreversibly bind to 30S ribosomal unit and inhibits protein synthesis. Bactericidal.
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Includes amikacin (SID, parvo pups), gentamicin, neomycin, and spectinomycin.
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Inactive against fungi, viruses and most anaerobic bacteria. Accumulate in inner ear and kidneys.
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Elimination via glomerular filtration. Adverse Effects – Nephrotoxic.
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Casts in urine, increased BUN and Cr. Nephrotoxicity reversible when drug discontinued. Ototoxic. 8th cranial nerve toxicity.
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Auditory and vestibular symptoms may be irreversible.
Fluoroquinolones
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Good G- aerobes, facultative anaerobes, atypical mycobacterium, chlamydia, mycoplasma, ehrilichia, BRD.
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Bactericidal. DNA gyrase inhibitor, prevent DNA synthesis. Enrofloxacin (SID, prostate, RMSF, deethylated to cipro), ciprofloxacin. Variable activity against Streptococci – not recommended. Contraindicated in young animals due to cartilage defects. Baytril associated with blindness in cats.
Sulfonamides
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G+, easy G-, anaerobes; nocardia and actinomyces. Bacteriostatic.
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Inhibit folic acid pathway (PABA/pteridine not converted to DHFA). Broad spectrum.
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Many bacteria have developed resistance. Potentiated sulfonamides – TMPS.
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Bactericidal, inhibits bacterial thymidine synthesis in folic acid pathway.
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Excellent tissue distribution. Most drug side effects of all Abs, allergic reactions, hepatotoxic, KCS, hypothroidism, crystalluria, thyrotoxic, anemia, BM toxicity (aplastic anemia, thrombocytopenia hypoprothrombinemia).
Tetracyclines
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G+, easy G-, Mycoplasma, spirochetes, chlamydia, Rickettsia, Hemobartonella, Brucellosis. Bacteriostatic.
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Inhibits protein synthesis by binding to the 30S ribosomal unit. Safe.
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Prostate. Includes doxycycline (biliary excretion), oxytetracycline, tetracycline. Resistance ↑.
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May cause esophagitis. Chloramphenicol – G+, G-. Bacteriostatic.
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Binds to the 50S ribosomal subunit preventing protein synthesis.
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Penetrates everything. Can cause aplastic anemia in humans.
Lincosomides
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G+ aerobes, anaerobes. No G-. Often combo w/ aminoglycosides. Lincomycin, clindamycin.
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Bacteriostatic or bactericidal. Bind to the 50S ribosomal subunit.
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Distribute well, biliary elimination. Contraindicated in rabbits, rodents, horses, ruminants due to serious GI effects.
Macrolides
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G+, selected G-. Bacteriostatic. Bind 50S ribosomal subunit. [ ] in alveolar macrophages, great for pulmonary infections.
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Erythromycin, tylosin, tilmicosin. Erythromycin is used in the treatment of Rhodococcus equi in combo w/ rifampin.
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Can cause increase in GI motility. Tilmicosin – used in BRD; CV toxicity in primates, horses, swine.
Metronidazole
Rifampin
Antifungal Agents
Amphotericin B
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Polyene macrolide. Binds to fungal sterols, altering permeability of membrane.
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Fungistatic. Dimorphic fungi (histo, blasto, crypto, coccidio).
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Because of the risk of severe toxicity reserved for disseminated, progressive, potentially fatal fungal infections. Nephrotoxic, anaphylactoid.
Imidazoles
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Fungistatic. Inhibit ergosterol/steroid synthesis (blocks cytochrome p450), ↑ cell membrane permeability, ↓ cell membrane fluidity.
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Use for dermatophytes, yeast, dimorphic fungi. Impairs steroid sythesis, so sometimes used in hyperadrenocorticism and prostate diz.
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Ketaconazole – Fairly safe (hepatotoxicity), give w/ food. Short t½. Not got w/ dimorphic fungi, esp. blasto.
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Itraconazole – more effective spectrum. Fluconazole – Crosses BBB.
Flucytosine
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Ancoban. Inhibits DNA synthesis (antimetabolite, competes with uracil, interfering with pyrimidine metabolism and protein synthesis).
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Limited spectrum - Cryptococcus, Candida. Rapid absorption, excellent distribution. Synergistic effect with amphotericin B.
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Adverse effects include BM depression (pancytopenia), GI disturbances, rashes, oral ulceration, increased liver enzymes.
Griseofulvin
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Inhibits fungal mitosis by disrupting mitotic spindle, inhibit nucleic acid and fungal wall sythesis.
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Limited to dermatophytes only. Give w/ fatty food to ↑ absorption. [ ] in keratin. Side effects include GI, teratogenic and carcinogenic at ↑ doses, bone marrow dyscrasias.
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Do not give to pregnant animals.
Antiseptic Agents
Alcohol
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Protein denaturation. 70% is effective against G+ and G- bacteria.
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Good bactericidal, fungicidal, virucidal. Most rapid acting but least residual action.
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Fast kill, defatting agent. Evaporates quickly. 2 min for max effect. May be drying or irritating.
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May cause cytotoxicity. Often used in combo w/ povidone iodine.
Chlorhexidine
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Cytoplasmic membrane disruption. 0.05% soln effective against Gram+ and Gram-.
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Persists on skin to give cumulative antibacterial effect. Less irritating.
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Not inactivated by organic matter. 0.05% is 1:40 dilution, most bactericidal and least toxic to tissues.
Hydrogen peroxide
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Poor antiseptic. Short-acting germicidal effect through release of nascent O2, irreversibly alters proteins.
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Effective sporicide. Effervescent action mechanically removes pus and bacteria.
Iodine
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One of most potent antiseptics. Bactericidal, virucidal, fungicidal. Takes 15 min for sporicidal action.
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Organic matter inactivates free I in PI. Iodine Soln USP has little to no stinging on broken skin.
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Iodine tincture USP (I in alcohol) is even more effective, but stings and irritates skin.
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Rare HPS rxns. Povidone iodine often used in conjunction w/ alcohol. Use PI in 0.1 to 1% [ ]; more dilure solns have ↑ free I and faster, potent bactericidal activity.
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Dilute stock solution 1:100 or 1:10. Don’t use I scrub on open wounds –damage tissue and ↑ infection.
Iodophors
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Betadine. Aqueous complex of iodine, less bactericidal but also less irritating. Gram-, gram+.
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Do not require repeated application for optimal antimicrobial effect.
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Contact time 10 min for max effect.
Hexachlorophene
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Gram+ bacteria. Only effective after days of use once film deposition on skin, long contact time.
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CNS toxin if absorbed, esp in young. Not used much anymore.
Quaternary ammonium compounds
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