1 / 76

Nursing Pharmacology

Nursing Pharmacology. Antimicrobials NUR 127. Medications and Administration. Prototype approach to teaching pharmacology:

tawny
Télécharger la présentation

Nursing Pharmacology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Nursing Pharmacology Antimicrobials NUR 127

  2. Medications and Administration Prototype approach to teaching pharmacology: Uses a prototype (a drug that is representative of it’s class) to help students learn by grouping the medications. It is a method of learning and organizing large amounts of information.

  3. Drugs for Bacterial Infections OBJECTIVES: Identify various types of pathogenic organisms Identify and describe pathogenicity and virulence of common bacterial pathogens Discuss the development of anti-infective drug resistance and identify the nurse/patient role in preventing development of resistant pathogens Discuss the development and common symptoms of superinfections caused by anti-infective therapy Identify prototype drugs within the anti-infective drug classes. Discuss mechanism of action, indication for use, contraindications, adverse effects and administration. Identify drugs within each class with specific features differing from the prototype.

  4. Terminology • Pathogenicity—ability of an organism to cause disease in a human • Virulence—severity of disease that an organism is able to cause; a highly virulent pathogens causes disease when present in very small numbers • Acquired Resistance—when a microbe is no longer affected by an anti-infective • Nephrotoxicity—an adverse effect on the kidneys • Hepatotoxicity—an adverse effect on the liver • Ototoxicity—an adverse effect on hearing • Superinfection—condition caused when a microorganism grows rapidly as a result of having less competition in its environment

  5. Terminology • Anti-infective aka antimicrobial—General term referring to drugs active against pathogens • Antibiotic aka antibacterial—Drugs active against bacteria • Bacteriocidal—kill bacteria • Bacteriostatic—slow the growth of bacteria • Chemoprophylaxis—prophylactic use of a medication

  6. Characteristics of Anti-Infectives • Includes antibacterials, antivirals and antifungals • Antibacterials (antibiotics) refer to drugs which treat bacterial infections • Narrow spectrum • Broad spectrum • Bactericidal (kills) vs. Bacteriostatic (inhibits)

  7. Common Human Pathogens • Viruses • Gram+: • enterococci, streptococci and staphylococci • Gram- organisms: • E.coli, Bacteroides, Klebsiella, Proteus, Pseudomonas • Opportunistic • Community-acquired vs. nosocomial

  8. Common Bacterial Pathogens • Staphylococci—Common in wounds , URI’s and pneumonia (MRSA—resistant strain) • Streptococci—Common infection in URI’s, ear infections & pneumonia • Enterococci—Common infection in UTI’s & wounds (VRE—resistant strain) • Escherichia coli—UTI’s; GI infection most commonly related to contaminated ground beef • Klebsiella—Causes respiratory tract infections, UTI’s, bloodstream, burn wound infections • Pneumococci—Most common cause of pneumonia in children; otitis media • Proteus—Cause UTI’s and wound infections • Pseudomonas—Cause respiratory tract infections, UTI’s, wound & burn wound infections (high resistance to many antibiotics)

  9. Disease Process • Pathogens generally cause disease by one of two basic mechanisms • Rapid growth • Production of toxins

  10. Normal Bacterial Flora • Colonized areas include the skin, upper respiratory tract, colon and vagina • Skin Flora (eg, staphylococci, streptococci) • Upper Respiratory Tract (eg, staphylococci, streptococci, pneumococci, Haemophilus influenzae) • Colon (eg, escherichia coli, Klebsiella, Enterobacter, Proteus, Pseudomonas, Bacteroids, clostridia, lactobacilli, strep, staph) • Vaginal (eg, Candida, lactobacilli, Bacteroids)

  11. Infectious Diseases • Presence of a pathogen plus clinical s/sx of infection • Patient with a compromised immune system may be prone to opportunistic infections caused by endogenous or environmental flora

  12. Drug Classification Classified by their chemical structure or by their mechanism of action • Mechanism of action • Cell-wall synthesis inhibitors, protein synthesis inhibitors, RNA or DNA synthesis inhibitors, antimetabolites ( • Bacteriocidal vs. Bacteriostatic • Bactericidal drugs kill organisms • Bacteriostatic drugs inhibit growth of organisms • Classification by chemical class • Share similar mechanisms of action and side effects (aminoglycoside, fluoroquinolone, sulfonamide)

  13. Antimicrobials • Used to prevent or treat infections caused by pathogenic microorganisms • Broad-spectrum drugs are effective against a wide variety of microorganisms • Narrow-spectrum drugs are effective against one or a restricted group of microorganisms

  14. Guidelines for use • Collect specimens before beginning therapy • Avoid use of broad-spectrum drugs • Use with other interventions—universal precautions, hand hygeine, isolation techniques, preoperative skin and bowel cleansing • Multidrug therapy should be avoided except in specific circumstances

  15. Anti-microbial Drug Administration • Dosage should be individualized • Dosages often determined by grams or milligrams per kilogram of body weight • Routes of administration • Most PO or IV • IM doses : deep and into a large muscle (Ventrogluteal preferred for adults) • Topical • Duration of therapy varies from single dose to years; most acute infections treated for 7 to 10 days

  16. Anti-microbial Drug Reactions • Hypersensitivity reactions • Occur most often with the ____________ administration • S/Sx: Low grade fever, rash, hives and swelling • Anaphylactic reactions • More likely to occur with IV route • Most often occur within 5-30min of injection • S/Sx: ________________________________________ ______________________________________________

  17. Common Adverse Effects • Phlebitis at IV sites; pain at IM sites • Nausea & Vomiting—Most Common Side Effect • Diarrhea (severe colitis possible with some antimicrobial therapy—s/sx blood stool, pus mucous) • Bone marrow suppression with thrombocytopenia (decreased plt)—most common with penicillins and cephalosporins • Nephrotoxicity—espaminoglycosides and sulfonamides • -

  18. Common Adverse Effects • Neurotoxicity—IV penicillins or cephalosporins • Ototoxicity: S/Sx: Tinnitus , vertigo, hearing loss • Hepatoxicity • Monitor Liver Function Tests: ALT, AST, Bilirubin • S/Sx: Jaundice, dark urine, pale stools, abd pain, fever • Photosensitivity

  19. Age-Related Considerations-Children • Penicillins and Cephalosporins generally safe • Fewer clinical trials on children • Erythromycin, Zithromax (azithromycin) and Biaxin (clarithromycin) considered safe

  20. Antimicrobials and Children • Aminoglycosides can cause ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity. • Tetracyclines are contraindicated in children younger than 8 years old, effects on teeth • Cleocin (clindamycin) admin. requires liver and kidney monitoring in neonates and infants

  21. Antimicrobials and Children • Fluoroquinolones contraindicated in children under 18 yo. May have effects on weight bearing joints. • Bactrim (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole) no longer 1st line due to resistance

  22. Antimicrobials and Older Adults • Penicillins are generally safe, IV admin. can cause hyperkalemia • Cephalosporins are considered sage but can affect or worsen renal failure • Macrolides are generally safe • Aminoglycosides are contraindicated in severe renal impairment

  23. Antimicrobials and Older Adults • Aminoglycosides can also cause ototoxicity • Cleocin (clindamycin)-diarrhea, colitis • Bactrim (trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole) may be associated with impaired liver or kidney function • Tetracyclines (except doxycycline) and Macrodantin (nitrofurantoin) are contraindicated in impaired renal function

  24. In General • With most oral antibiotics, liberal fluid intake is recommended • Always be aware of pregnancy category before administering medication

  25. Lab ID of Pathogens • Culture and sensitivity • Serology-measures antibody levels • Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) detects the specific DNA for a specific organism

  26. Antibiotic-Resistant Microorganisms Occurs when: • Clinical condition of host is impaired • Normal flora have been suppressed • interrupted or inadequate tx • Type of bacteria • Widespread use of broad spectrum abx • Environmental setting of host

  27. Host Defense Weakened by • Breaks in skin and mucous membranes • Impaired blood supply • Neutropenia • Malnutrition • Poor personal hygiene • Suppression of normal flora • Diabetes, advanced age or immunosuppression

  28. Mechanisms of Action • Inhibit cell wall synthesis • Alter membrane permeability (PCNs, Cephalosporins, Vancomycin_ • Inhibition of protein synthesis (EES, tetracyclines, clindamycin, aminoglycosides)

  29. Mechanisms of Action cont. • Disruption of microbial cell membranes (anti-fungals) • Inhibition of organism reproduction by interfering w/nucleic acid synthesis (fluoroquinolones, HIV anti-retrovirals) • Inhibition of cell metabolism and growth (sulfonamides)

  30. Administration • Labs to Monitor • Blood levels of the antibiotic • CBC (complete blood count) • WBC (white blood cell) count • WBC should return to normal if med is effective

  31. Prophylactic Therapy • STD exposure • Recurrent UTIs • TB • Perioperative infections in high risk patients or high risk surgeries

  32. Antibiotic Combination Therapy • Used when infection is caused by multiple microorganisms • Nosocomial infections • Serious infections in which a combination is synergistic (aminoglycoside and antipseudomonal PCN)

  33. Antibiotic Combination Therapy cont. • Likely emergence of drug resistant organisms • In those who are immunosuppressed

  34. Antibiotics Affecting the Bacterial Cell Wall • Monobactam Antibiotics • Penicillins • Penicillin (P) • Cephalosporins • Cefotaxime (P) • Vancomycins • vancomycin • Carbapenems • meropenem

  35. Beta Lactams • Contain a beta-lactam ring that is part of their chemical structure • An intact beta-lactam ring is essential for antibacterial activity • Include: Penicillins, Cephalosporins, Carbapenems • Cross-sensitivity

  36. Penicillins • Prototype is Penicillin G • Most serious complication is hypersensitivity. Can cause seizures and nephropathy. • Contraindicated in patients with known allergy to PCN, cephalosporins, or imipenem.

  37. Indications for Penicillins

  38. Examples of Penicillins • Penicillins G and V (parenteral); dicloxacillin (antistaph); • Ampicillins—Principen, Amoxil • Antipseudomonals—Geocillin (carbenicillin), Ticar (ticaracillin), Pipracil (piperacillin) • Combinations for beta lactamase—Unasyn (ampicillin/sulbactam), Zosyn (piperacillin/taxobactam)

  39. Cephalosporins • Also derived from a mold • Broad spectrum with activity against both gram positive and gram negative bacteria • Cefotamine (P)- 3rd generation

  40. Cephalosporins • Indications-surgical prophy, tx infections of the respiratory tract, skin, bone and joints, urinary tract, brain and spinal cord and in septicemia

  41. Cephalosporins • Contraindicated in anaphylaxis to a penicillin • May develop a delayed reaction or cross-sensitivity • A/E: • Hypersensitivity • Anaphylaxis • GI: n/v/d • Pain at injection site

  42. Examples • Oral—Keflex (cephalexin); Ceclor (cefaclor), Lorabid (lorcarbef); Omnicef (cefdinir) • Parenteral—Ancef (kefzol); Mefoxin (cefoxitin); Claforan (cefotaxime), Fortaz (ceftazidime), Rocephin (ceftriaxone); Maxipime (cefepime)

  43. Carbapenems • Broad spectrum, bactericidal, beta-lactam anti-microbials. Inhibit synthesis of cell walls. • All are parenteral • Indicated for organisms resistant to other drugs • Examples: Merrem (meropenem) and Primaxin (imipenem-cilastatin)

  44. Monobactam Antibiotics • Azactam (aztreonam) is active against gram-negative bacteria and to many resistant strains • Stable in presence of beta lactamase • Preserves normal gram positive and anaerobic flora

  45. FYI • Penicillins may be given with Probenecid or aminoglycosides for serious infections • PCN can cause nephropathies • Ticaracillin has been linked to hypernatremia • PCN G can cause hyperkalemia • Caution w/Augmentin in hepatic impairment • Need to adjust dosages of all beta lactams in the presence of renal impairment whether PCN, cephalosporins, carbapenems and monobactams

  46. Antibiotics affecting Protein Synthesis • Aminoglycosides • Gentamicin (P) • Tetracyclines • Tetracycline (P) • Macrolide Antibiotics • Erythromycin (P)

  47. Aminoglycosides • Bactericidal agents to treat gram negative organisms such as: Proteus, Klebsiella, Enterobacter, Serratia, Escherichia coli, and Pseudomonas • Narrow specturm • Accumulate in kidneys and ears • Gentamycin (P)

More Related