1 / 18

ANTIBIOTICS

Internal Medicine Mini-Lecture. ANTIBIOTICS. Learning Points. Basics Choosing antibiotics Overview. Basics. Make sure you try to collect cultures before starting antibiotics Many antibiotics require renal dosing, such as vancomycin. If you ’ re unsure the dose call the pharmacist.

trung
Télécharger la présentation

ANTIBIOTICS

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. Internal Medicine Mini-Lecture ANTIBIOTICS

  2. Learning Points • Basics • Choosing antibiotics • Overview

  3. Basics • Make sure you try to collect cultures before starting antibiotics • Many antibiotics require renal dosing, such as vancomycin. If you’re unsure the dose call the pharmacist. • ID approval is required for many antibiotics such as vancomycin, levofloxacin, ciprofloxacin. Call the ID fellow for approval when required. • Use your Sanford Guide and hospital antibiograms to help guide you • Sanford Guide now has an app for iphones – very useful on the wards! • Epocrates app also has useful guides

  4. Case • A 62-year-old man with history of poorly controlled Diabetes, HTN, and Hyperlipidemia presents with worsening left lower extremity pain. Physical exam reveals cellulitis and possible wound infection, with concern for osteomyelitis.

  5. Factors to consider when choosing antibiotics • patient's recent antibiotic therapy • Hospital flora • presence of underlying diseases • available culture data – current AND past • risk for drug resistant pathogens: • receipt of antibiotics within the preceding 90 days • current hospitalization of ≥5 days • antibiotic resistance in the community • immunosuppressive disease and/or therapy • presence of risk factors for resistance

  6. Choosing an antibiotic: • Think about Location: • Where did the patient become ill? Travel? Exposure? • Where did the infection anatomically originate? • Where in the body, has or will the infection spread to? • Think about the bug you are treating:

  7. Consider your bugs! What are you treating or covering empirically?

  8. Antibiotic classes • Beta-lactams* • Aminoglycosides • Quinolones* • Macrolides* • Lincosamides* • Metronidazole* • Glycopeptides • Oxazolidinones • Streptogramins • Lipopeptides • Tetracyclines • Chloramphenicol • Polymyxins • Sulfonamides • Trimethoprim • Rifamycins • Nitrofurantoin * These groups will be reviewed further

  9. B-Lactams: Penicillins • Penicillin • Use: pneumococcus, strep, enterococcus, N. meningitidis, syphilis, listeria, leptospirosis and oral anerobes: peptostreptococcus and prevotella • Amoxicillin • Use: Covers same stuff as penicillin and expanded activity against gram negatives ( E.coli, Proteus,H. influenza, H. pylori, N. meningitidis, shigella, klebsiella); covers most spirochetes including lyme disease. Clavulanate enhances the gram negative spectrum to include additional anaerobes such as bacteroides. • Oxacillin/Nafcillin/Dicloxacillin • Use: Only good for staphylococcal spp (except MRSA), pneumococcus and other streptococci • Piperacillin and Ticarcillin • Use: Piperacillin covers pneumococcus, streptococcal spp including enterococcus, gram negative including pseudomonas. • Does not cover MRSA.

  10. B-Lactams: Cephalosporins 1st generation • Cefazolin: • Use: staph, non-enterococal strep; prophylactic in clean surgeries, cellultis, folliculitis • Limitations: respiratory tract infections, animal bites or surgeries involving the colon 2nd Generation • Cefuroxime: • Use: respiratory infections--Strep pneumoniae, H.influenzae and M.cattarhalis; , meningitis due to pneumococcus,H.flu and N.meningitidis. • Limitations: enteric organisms/abdominal anaerobes • Cefoxitin/Cefotetan: • Use: intra-abdominal infections especially anerobes • Limitations: staph and other gram positives

  11. B-Lactams: Cephalosporins 3rd Generation • Cefotaxime & Ceftriaxone: • Use: Good for staph and non-enterococcal strep; broad coverage of gram negative and oral anaerobes, CNS, pulmonary, endovascular, GI infections (excluding gut anaerobes), sinusitis, otitis, head & neck. • Limitations: does NOT cover Pseudomonas; ceftriaxone can cause biliarysludging and limits its utility in treating biliary tree infections • Ceftazidime: • Use: Good gram negative coverage including Pseudomonas; febrile neutropenia CNS infections- good for Pseudomonas meningitis • Limitations: reduced activity against the gram positives and oral anaerobes. 4th Generation • Cefepime & Cefpirome: • Use: Enterobacter, Citrobacter and Serratia;Pseudomonas; gram positives; used in neutropenic fever and CNS infections.

  12. Beta-Lactams: Carbapenems • Imepenem: • slightly more activity against gram positive bacteria than meropenem or ertapenem • Ertapenem: • Good for aerobic gram negatives • poor coverage of pseudomonas ,E. faecalis, nocardia • Meropenem: • Good for aerobic gram negatives • Doripenem: • Good for CNS coverage and pseudomonas

  13. Beta-Lactams • Cautions: • Beta-lactam allergy can occur in up to 10% • 5%-10% cross-sensitivity in penicillin, cephalosporins, and carbapenems • Side effects: • diarrhea, nausea, rash

  14. Quinolones: • Ciprofloxacin: • Use: Covers most aerobic gram negatives including Pseudomonas. • penetrates CNS, prostate, lungs • Limited against staph • Non-ciprofloxacin quinolones: Ofloxacin, Levofloxacin, Moxifloxacin: Gemifloxacin: • Use: Great for respiratory pathogens, most enteric gram negatives • Only levofloxacin covers pseudomonas • Covers some atypicals: Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Legionella • Cautions: • Can cause Qt prolongation, tendon rupture, CNS toxicity • Do not use in patients with epilepsy or existing CNS lesions or inflammation • Side effects: • Commonly causes C diff

  15. Macrolides:Erythromycin, Clarithromycin, Azithromycin • Use: • Broad spectrum against gram positives including strep, staph aureus (MSSA) • Good for atypical oganism such as Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Legionella • Covers N.gonorrhea, H flu, Legionella • Caution: • can interact with statin to cause myopathy • Can cause Qt prolongation • Side effects: • GI upset

  16. Lincosamides: Clindamycin • Use: • Reasonable gram positive aerobic coverage against strep and many staph including MRSA • Special role in treating strep in necrotizing fascitits • Anaerobic coverage better then penicillin but not as good as metronidazole • Caution: • can interact with neuromuscular blocking agents and cyclosporine • Side effects: • Diarrhea, commonly causes C difficile—avoid clindamycin if other good options exist.

  17. Metronidazole • Use: • No aerobic activity • Does not stand alone for mixed infections • Good coverage of anaerobes • Can be used for C diff, parasites, bacterial vaginosis • Caution: • May require reduced dose in liver disease • Can increase effect of warfarin • Side effects: • Nausea, GI toxicity, antabuse reaction with Etoh; headache, seizure, peripheral neuropathy with prolonged therapy.

  18. Antibiotic Coverage Quick Guide • 1. Pseudomonas: • Zosyn • Aminoglycosides • Cephalosporins: Ceftazidine, Cefepime • Fluoroquinolones: Cipro, Levaquin • Carbipenems: Imipenem, Meropenem • Aztreonam • Colistin • 3. MRSA: • Bactrim • Clindamycin • Doxycyclin • Vancomycin • Linezolid • Tigecycline • Daptomycin – cannot use in lungs! • 2. Anaerobes: • Flagyl – PO • Clindamycin – PO • Zosyn – IV • Unasyn – IV • Augmentin – PO • Carbipenem • Moxifloxacin • Tigecycline • 4. VRE: • Linezolid • Tigecycline • Daptomycin

More Related