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Broad Broad Spectrum Antibiotics Spectrum Antibiotics Spectrum Antibiotics Spectrum Antibiotics

This document discusses broad spectrum antibiotics tetracyclines and chloramphenicol. It provides details on tetracyclines including their classification, mechanism of action, antimicrobial spectrum, pharmacokinetics, therapeutic uses and adverse effects. A new class of synthetic tetracycline analogues called glycylcyclines is also described, with focus on tigecycline. The document briefly mentions chloramphenicol but does not provide any details.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
70 views41 pages

Broad Broad Spectrum Antibiotics Spectrum Antibiotics Spectrum Antibiotics Spectrum Antibiotics

This document discusses broad spectrum antibiotics tetracyclines and chloramphenicol. It provides details on tetracyclines including their classification, mechanism of action, antimicrobial spectrum, pharmacokinetics, therapeutic uses and adverse effects. A new class of synthetic tetracycline analogues called glycylcyclines is also described, with focus on tigecycline. The document briefly mentions chloramphenicol but does not provide any details.

Uploaded by

Amit Haldar
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Broad Spectrum Antibiotics

(Tetracyclines & Chloramphenicol)

Dr. B. T. Rane
Tetracyclines
Tetracyclines
 ‘A class of antibiotics having a nucleus of 4 cyclic rings’.

 Obtained from soil actinomycetes.


 Chlortetracycline (Aureomycin): 1st Tetracycline (1948).
Classification of Tetracyclines
Natural Semi-synthetic
synthetic Synthetic
Tetracycline
Analogues
(Glycylcyclines)
Chlortetracycline Tetracycline Tigecycline
(Not used now) Doxycycline
Minocycline
Oxytetracycline Demeclocycline
1. 2. 3. 4.
Aminoglycosides Tetracyclines Chloramphenicol Macrolides

Figure : Bacterial protein synthesis and the sites of action of antibiotics


Mechanism of Action of Tetracyclines
 Primarily bacteriostatic.
 Inhibit protein synthesis in the susceptible microbes
as follows:
 Bind to the 30S ribosomes in the susceptible
microbes
→ Block the attachment of aminoacyl-t-RNA
aminoacyl to the
acceptor (A) site of mRNA-ribosome
mRNA complex
→ Peptide chain fails to grow
→ Protein synthesis is inhibited.
Antimicrobial Spectrum of Tetracyclines
 Gram + ve Cocci: Some strains of:
• Streptococcus pyogenes
• Staphylococcus aureus (including MRSA)
• Enterococci.
 Gram - ve Cocci: Some strains of:
• Neisseria gonorrhoeae
• Neisseria meningitidis
(Minocycline may still have Significant activity
against these cocci)
 Gram + ve bacilli:
 Clostridia & other anaerobes,
Corynebacteria, Propionibacterium acnes,
Bacillus anthracis, Listeria,
Mycobacterium leprae (only to minocycline).
 Gram - ve bacilli:
 H. ducreyi, C. granulomatis, V. cholerae,
Y. pestis, Y. enterocolitica, C. jejuni, Brucella,
P. multocida, F. tularensis & many anaerobes.
 Spirochaetes:
Treponema pallidum, Borrelia (relapsing fever)
 Rickettsiae (typhus etc): All are highly sensitive.
 Chlamydiae: All are highly sensitive.
 Mycoplasma: Moderately sensitive.
 Actinomyces: Moderately sensitive.
 Protozoa: (Inhibited at high conc).
• Entamoeba histolytica, Plasmodia.
Pharmacokinetics of tetracyclines
• Older tetra: Incomplete absorption from GIT.
• Doxycycline & Minocycline: Complete absorption
(irrespective of food).
• Chelating property:
Bind with calcium & other metals thereby forming
insoluble & unabsorbable complexes:
 Avoid / stagger the concurrent administration with
milk, iron, non-systemic
systemic antacids, sucralfate etc.
• Bind to the connective tissue in the bones &
teeth.
• Minocycline: highly lipid soluble.
 Accumulates in the body fat.
• Low CSF concentrations:
(even during meningeal inflammation).
• Dose reduction needed in renal failure:
(except doxycycline).
• Secreted in milk:
 may affect the suckling infant.
• Oral capsule:
 Most preferred dosage form.
• Doxycycline:
 Most commonly used tetracycline
 (100 mg / once or twice daily).
Therapeutic uses of tetracyclines
I) Drugs of first choice in:
in
1. Venereal diseases:

 Chlamydial infections:: (Chlamydia


trachomatis):
 Nonspecific urethritis / Endocervicitis:
(Doxycycline 100 mg BD orally X 7 days).
 Lymphogranuloma venereum:
venereum
(Doxycycline 100 mg BD orally X 3 weeks).
 Granuloma inguinale (Donovanosis):
(Calymmatobacterium granulomatis)
(Doxycycline 100 mg BD orally X 3 weeks)
weeks

2. Rickettsial infections: Dramatic response in:


 Typhus
 Q fever
 Rocky mountain spotted fever.
3. Atypical pneumonia:
 Mycoplasma pneumoniae:
 ↓ Duration of illness.
 Chlamydia psittaci (Ornithosis/Parrot fever):
 Two weeks therapy is needed.
4. Cholera:
 ↓ Stool volume & DuraEon of diarrhoea.
5. Brucellosis:
(Malta /Mediterranean/ Undulant fever):
Doxycycline 200 mg/day + Rifampicin 600 mg/day
for 6 weeks (+ Gentamicin in acute cases)
 Highly effective  Rapid symptomatic relief.
6. Plague: Mass Rx of suspected cases in epidemic.
Effective in both bubonic & pneumonic plague.
7. Relapsing fever: (d/t: Borrelia recurrentis).
II) As Second choice drugs in:
in
Conditions Second choice to:
Tetanus, Anthrax, Penicillin /Ampicillin
Actinomycosis, Listeriosis.
Gonorrhoea (in the patients Ceftriaxone/Amoxycillin/
allergic to penicillin) Azithromycin
Syphilis (in the patients allergic Ceftriaxone
to penicillin)
Leptospirosis Penicillin
(Doxy 100 mg BD X 7 days).
III) Other situations in which tetracyclines are used:
used
• UTI: Odd cases if sensitive.
• Community Acquired Pneumonia:
Pneumonia
 If a selective antibiotic can’t be used.
• Chronic intestinal amoebiasis:
amoebiasis
 With other amoebicides.
• Chloroquine-resistant
resistant P. falciparum malaria:
malaria
 As adjuvant to Quinine / Artesunate.
• Acne vulgaris: Prolonged therapy with low doses.
IV) As empirical therapy:
therapy
 If the nature & sensitivity of infecting
microorganism is not known.
 Initial Rx of mixed infections.
 Unreliable as empirical treatment of
serious / life threatening infections.
Adverse effects of Tetracyclines
1. Teeth & Bones:
Tetracyclines have chelating property
 Calcium-tetracycline
tetracycline chelate gets deposited in
the developing teeth & bones.
 If given from midpregnancy to 5 months of
age,deciduous teeth are affected resulting in:
→ Brown discolouration, ill formed teeth &
↑ suscepEbility to dental caries.
• Given between 3 months to 6 years of age:
→ Damage to the crown of permanent anterior
dentition.
• Given during late pregnancy or childhood:
→ Temporary suppression of bone growth.
2. Phototoxicity:
 Sunburn like severe skin reaction on exposed parts
 Higher incidence with Demeclocycline & Doxycycline.
3. Superinfections:
• Occur commonly as tetracyclines cause marked
suppression of the resident flora.
• Intestinal superinfection by Candida albicans is most
prominent.
• More liability of Candidial diarrhoea d/t incomplete
absorption in the ileum.
• Pseudomembranous enterocolitis (Clostridium difficile)
(Rare but serious).
• Overgrowth of Pseudomonas & Proteus in the bowel.
4. Liver damage:
• Fatty infiltration of liver & jaundice occasionally.
• Given during pregnancy:
→ may precipitate fatal acute hepatic necrosis.
5. Kidney damage:
(esp. in patients with kidney disease):
• Worsening of renal failure (except doxycycline).
• Fanconi syndrome-like
like condition due to the use of
outdated & degraded tetracyclines (cause damage to
the proximal tubules).
6. Irritative effects:
• Irritant property of tetracyclines can cause:
→ Epigastric pain, nausea, vomiting &
diarrhoea.
• Accidental release of the material from
capsule
into the oesophagus during swallowing:
→ Odynophagia (pain while swallowing)
→ oesophageal ulceration
• Thrombophlebitis of the injected vein.
7. Vestibular toxicity: Minocycline can cause:
 Ataxia, vertigo & nystagmus.
 Subside on discontinuation.
8. Antianabolic effect:
 ↓ Protein synthesis
 - ve nitrogen balance
 ↑ Blood urea
9. Diabetes insipidus: Demeclocycline antagonizes ADH
acEon & ↓ urine concentraEng ability of the kidneys.
10. ↑ ICT: noted in some infants.
Glycylcyclines
 A new class of synthetic tetracycline analogues.
 Active against most of the bacteria that have
developed resistance to the classical tetracyclines:
 Have the broadest spectrum of activity.
Tigecycline
• First glycylcycline (2005).
• Derivative of minocycline.
• Active against most of the gram + ve & gram – ve
cocci
as well as anaerobes (Tetra sensitive & resistant).
 Pharmacokinetics of Tigecycline:
Tigecycline
• Poor absorption on oral administration.
• Given by slow IV infusion (only).
• Wide tissue distribution.
• Long DOA: (Elimination t1/2 : 36-60 hours).
 MOA of Tigecycline:
 Same as tetracyclines.
 Dose:
 100 mg loading dose, followed by 50 mg BD
by IV infusion over 30-60
30 min, for 5-14 days.
 No cross-resistance
resistance with tetracyclines because:
because
 Tetracycline efflux pumps have low affinity for
Tigecycline.
 Bacterial ribosomal protection protein against
tetracycline has less capacity to protect the
ribosomal binding site from tigecycline.
 Approved therapeutic uses of Tigecycline:
Tigecycline
• Serious & hospitalized patients of community
acquired pneumonia.
• Complicated skin & skin structure infections
• Complicated intra-abdominal
abdominal infections
(caused by Enterococci, Anaerobes &
Enterobacteriaceae).
Chloramphenicol
Chloramphenicol
 Broad spectrum antibiotic.
 Initially obtained from Streptomyces
venezuelae, now entirely synthetic.
 Antibacterial activity d/t its nitrobenzene
moiety.
 Primarily bacteriostatic action.
Mechanism of action:
 Inhibition of bacterial protein synthesis:
1. 2. 3. 4.
Aminoglycosides Tetracyclines Chloramphenicol Macrolides

Figure : Bacterial protein synthesis and the sites of action of antibiotics


MOA of chloramphenicol
 Attaches to the 50S ribosome near the acceptor (A)
site of the ribosome-mRNA
mRNA complex
→ Interferes with the transfer of elongating
(nascent) peptide chain from the peptidyl (P) site
to the at the acceptor (A) site (that has the newly
attached aminoacyl tRNA)
→ Prevents the peptide bond formation between the
nascent peptide chain & the newly attached amino acid
→ Inhibits the bacterial protein synthesis.
Antimicrobial spectrum of chloramphenicol
 Broad spectrum antibiotic.
 Primarily bacteriostatic.
 Active against nearly the same range of microbes
as tetracyclines. Notable differences between these:
 Chloramphenicol is more active & has cidal effect
against H. influenzae & N. meningitidis (in high conc.)
 More active against B. pertussis & Klebsiella.
 Less active against gram + ve cocci & Spirochaetes.
 No inhibition of Entamoeba & Plasmodia.
Therapeutic uses of chloramphenicol
1. Intraocular infections:
Attains high conc. in the ocular fluid on
systemic admn:
 Preferred drug for endophthalmitis caused
by sensitive bacteria.
2. Topically: (0.5-5 %):
 Conjunctivitis
 External ear infections
3. As second line drug for:
i) Pyogenic meningitis: (Bacterial meningitis):
(DOC: Third gen. cephalosporins + Vancomycin)
• Due to its excellent CSF penetration & proven
efficacy, Chloramphenicol may be used as second
line drug in:
 Haemophilus influenzae meningitis
 Meningococcal meningitis (N. meningitidis).
ii) Anaerobic infections: (B. fragilis etc):
(DOC: Clindamycin/Metronidazole + Penicillin/Cephalo)
 Wound infections
 Intraabdominal infections,
 Pelvic abscess
 Brain abscess.
iii) Whooping cough: (As second choice to erythromycin).
iv) Rickettsial infections & Brucellosis:
Brucellosis
(especially in young children & pregnant women,
as tetracyclines are contraindicated in them).
Adverse effects of chloramphenicol
1. Bone marrow depression: Amongst all antibiotics,
Chloramphenicol is the most prominent cause of:
 Aplastic anaemia, Agranulocytosis,
Thrombocytopenia & Pancytopenia.
 Two forms:
i) Non-dose
dose related idiosyncratic reaction:
reaction
 Rare, unpredictable, fatal & based on genotype.
 Many victims, even if they survive, may develop
leukaemias later on.
ii) Dose & duration of therapy related:
related
 Direct toxic effect, predictable, reversible &
d/t
inhibition of mitochondrial enzyme synthesis
in the erythropoietic cells.
 Often reversible (No long-term
long sequelae).
2. Gray baby syndrome:
• D/t inability of the newborn to adequately
metabolize
& excrete chloramphenicol
 Avoid in neonates.
3. Hypersensitivity reactions:
reactions
 Rashes, fever, atrophic glossitis,
angioedema.
4. Irritative effects:
 Nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, pain on inj.
5. Superinfections:
 Similar to tetracyclines, but less common.
Thank You

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