Title: Core Concepts in Pharmacology Second Edition
1 Drugs for Bacterial Infections
2Mechanism of Action
- Cell wall inhibitors
- Protein synthesis inhibitors
- Folic acid inhibitors
- Reverse transcriptase inhibitors
3Figure 22.2 Mechanisms of action of
antimicrobial drugs
4Primary Goal of Antimicrobial Therapy
- Bacteriocidal - kill bacteria
- Bacteriostatic - slow the growth of bacteria
5Bacterial Cells Differ from Human Cell Structure
- Antibiotics target the cell wall and enzymes of
bacteria - Bacteria killed or slowed
- Some adverse effects can be expected
6Antibiotics Promote Appearance of Drug-Resistant
Bacterial Strains
- Destroy bacteria sensitive to drug
- Remaining mutated bacteria insensitive to drug
- Mutations are random, and occur during cell
division - Mutated bacteria begin to multiply and infect
- Antibiotic does not create mutation
7Widespread Use of Antibiotics Leads to Resistant
Strains
- Only prescribed when medically necessary
- Long-time use increases resistant strains
- Nosocomial infections
- Hospital acquired
- Often resistant to common antibiotics
- Prophylactic use or chemophylaxis
- Use in certain cases is appropriate
8Selection of the Correct Antibiotic Is Essential
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics - effective against a
wide variety of bacteria - Narrow-spectrum antibiotics - effective against a
restricted group of bacteria or one type
9Penicillins
- One of the oldest and safest groups of
anti-infectives - Isolated from the fungus Penicillium (1941)
10Chemical Modifications Produced New Drugs
- Effective against penicillinase - producing
bacteria - Example - oxacillin (Prostaphlin), cloxacillin
(Tegopen) - Broad-spectrum penicillin
- Example - ampillicin (Polycillin)
11Chemical Modifications Produced New Drugs (contd)
- Extended-spectrum penicillin
- Example - carbenicillin (Geocillin, Geopen) and
piperacillin (Pipracil) - Beta-lactamase inhibitors
- Only available in fixed-dose combinations with
penicillins - Example - Augmentin (amoxicillin plus clavulanate)
12Cephalosporins
- Similar in structure and function to penicillins
- One of the most widely prescribed anti-infectives
13Third Generation
- Longer duration of action
- Even broader spectrum
- Resistant to beta-lactamase
- Drug of choice against infections caused by
Pseudomonas, Klebsiella, Neisseria, Salmonella,
Proteus, and Haemophilus influenza
14Fourth Generation
- Effective against organisms that are resistant to
earlier cephalosporins
15Primary Therapeutic Use
- Gram-negative infections
- Clients who cannot tolerate less expensive
penicillins
16Macrolides
- Safe alternative to penicillin
- First isolated from Streptomyces in a soil sample
(1952) - Prescribed for infections that are resistant to
penicillins
17Drug of Choice for
- Whooping cough
- Legionnaires disease
- Infections caused by
- Streptococcus, Haemophilus influenza, Mycoplasma
pneumoniae, Chlamydia
18Aminoglycosides
- First isolated from a soil organism (1942)
- Have an amino group (NH2) and a sugar group
19More Toxic than Most Antibiotic Classes
- Ototoxicity
- May be permanent
- Conduct frequent hearing tests while taking drug
so you can discontinue - Nephrotoxicity
20Drug Profile - Fluoroquinolones
- Ciprofloxacin (Cipro)
- Actions and uses
- Adverse effects and interactions
- Mechanism in action
21Sulfonamides
- Started a new era for treatment of infectious
disease (1930) - Its discoverer won a Nobel Prize in medicine
(1938)
22 Drugs for Fungal, Viral, and Parasitic Diseases
23Systemic Mycoses
- Affect internal organs (lungs, brain, digestive
organs) - Less common than superficial mycoses
- Sometimes fatal to clients with suppressed immune
systems - Treated with oral or parenteral agents
- More side effects
24Patients at High Risk for Fungal Infections
- Those with healthy immune systems have few
serious fungal infections - Patients with suppressed immune systems may have
frequent fungal infections - Example - those infected with HIV
- Require intensive drug therapy
25Drug Therapy for Systemic Fungal Infections
(contd)
- Newer azole drugs are coming into widespread
use - Fluconazole (Diflucan)
- Itraconazole (Sporonox)
- Ketoconazole (Nizoral)
- Several used for both superficial and systemic
mycoses
26 Drugs for Neoplasia
27Abnormal Cell Growth
- Rapid, uncontrolled cell division
- Damage to genes controlling cell growth
- Cancer cells lose normal functions
- Cancer cells invade surrounding cells
- Cancer cells can metastasize
28Treatment of Cancer
- Surgery, radiation therapy, and chemotherapy
- Greater chances for cure if the cancer is treated
early
29Successful Treatment
- Treat tumors at an early stage
- Use multiple drugs
- Use several methods
- Chemotherapy
- Radiation
- Surgery
30Different Antineoplastic Classes Are Given
- Different classes affect different stages of the
cancers life cycle - Allows lower dosages of each agent
- Reducing toxicity
- Slowing development of resistance
31Specific Dosing Schedules/Cycles Increase
Effectiveness
- Single or multiple doses over several days
- Gives normal cells a chance to recover
- Cancer cells may be more sensitive during the
time of the next treatment
32Serious Toxicity
- Pushed to maximum possible dosage
- Greatest tumor cells killed
- Always result in adverse effects
33Rapidly Growing Cells Most Susceptible to Adverse
Effects
- Hair follicles - hair loss (alopecia)
- Lining of digestive tract - severe bleeding or
diarrhea - Vomiting center in medulla - nausea and vomiting
- Treated with antiemetic drugs before treatment
begins
34Rapidly Growing Cells Most Susceptible to Adverse
Effects (contd)
- Blood cells in bone marrow may be destroyed
- Red blood cells
- White blood cells
- Platelets
- Severe effects often cause therapy to be stopped
- Growth factors may be used
- Examples - filgrastim (Neupogen) or sargramostim
(Leukine, Prokine)
35Alkylating Agent -Cytoxan
- Most widely used antineoplastic drug
- Form bonds or linkages with DNA
- Called alkylation
- Changes the shape of DNA
- Prevents normal DNA function
- Kill or slow down replication of tumor cells
- Adverse effect
- Bone marrow suppression
- Damage epithelial cells lining GI tract
36Antimetabolites - Mexate
- Chemically similar to essential building blocks
of the cell - Resemble purines or pyrimidines
- Building blocks of DNA and RNA
- Cancer cells use this drug to construct proteins
or DNA - Block DNA synthesis
- Kill cancer cells or slow growth
37Plant Alkaloids/Natural Products - Vicristine
- Structurally very different
- Common ability to arrest cell division
- Sometimes called mitotic inhibitors
38Hormones and Hormone Blockers - Tamoxifin
- Used to slow the growth of hormone-dependant
tumors - Certain tumors stimulated by natural hormones
- Specific hormones or hormone blockers can block
receptor sites - Examples of hormones used in cancer chemotherapy
- Use of testosterone or antiestrogen to slow
breast cancer (Tamoxifen) - Estrogen to slow the growth of prostate cancer
- Other major class is corticosteroids