Introduction & Classification - Fluoro Power Intro
- Synthetic, broad-spectrum antimicrobial agents.
- Fluoroquinolones (FQs): Fluorine atom at position 6 → ↑ potency & ↑ spectrum.
- Classified by generations based on antimicrobial spectrum.
- 📌 Key Drugs (1st-4th): Naughty Cats Love Milk (Nalidixic acid, Ciprofloxacin, Levofloxacin, Moxifloxacin).
| Generation | Key Drugs | Spectrum Highlights |
|---|---|---|
| 1st | Nalidixic acid | Narrow: Gram-negative (e.g., uncomplicated UTIs) |
| 2nd | Ciprofloxacin, Norfloxacin, Ofloxacin | Broader: ↑ Gram-negative (inc. Pseudomonas), some Gram-positive, atypicals |
| 3rd | Levofloxacin, Sparfloxacin | "Respiratory FQs": Excellent S. pneumoniae, Gram-negative, atypicals |
| 4th | Moxifloxacin, Gemifloxacin, Trovafloxacin | Broadest: Gram-positive, Gram-negative, atypicals, anaerobes |
Mechanism of Action - DNA Dance Disruption
- Quinolones are bactericidal; they disrupt bacterial DNA synthesis.
- Inhibit key enzymes for DNA replication & repair:
- DNA Gyrase (Topoisomerase II):
- Main target in Gram-negative bacteria.
- Prevents supercoiled DNA relaxation (essential for replication/transcription).
- Topoisomerase IV:
- Main target in Gram-positive bacteria.
- Blocks daughter DNA separation (post-replication).
- DNA Gyrase (Topoisomerase II):
- Result: DNA strand breaks → bacterial cell death.
- 📌 Mnemonic: Quinolones stop the DNA "dance" (gyration, separation).
⭐ Quinolones cause bactericidal action by inhibiting bacterial DNA synthesis via DNA gyrase (Gram-negative) and Topoisomerase IV (Gram-positive).
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Pharmacokinetics & Spectrum - Germ Warfare Guide
- Pharmacokinetics (PK):
- Absorption: Good oral bioavailability.
⭐ Cations (Ca²⁺, Mg²⁺, Fe²⁺, Al³⁺) in antacids or dairy products significantly impair oral absorption of quinolones due to chelation.
- Distribution: Excellent tissue penetration (bone, prostate, lung, phagocytes). Variable CSF penetration.
- Metabolism: Hepatic (variable); Ciprofloxacin notably inhibits CYP1A2.
- Excretion: Primarily renal (glomerular filtration & tubular secretion); requires dose adjustment in renal failure. Moxifloxacin is an exception (primarily hepatic, no renal dose adjustment).
- Absorption: Good oral bioavailability.
- Spectrum of Activity: Broad.
- Gram-negative aerobes: Strong activity (Enterobacteriaceae, H. influenzae, Neisseria spp.). P. aeruginosa (Ciprofloxacin & Levofloxacin are most active).
- Gram-positive aerobes: Newer "Respiratory Quinolones" (Levofloxacin, Moxifloxacin, Gemifloxacin) cover S. pneumoniae. Active against MSSA.
- Atypicals: Effective against Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniae, Legionella pneumophila.
- Anaerobes: Moxifloxacin shows good activity; others generally poor.
- Mycobacteria: Active against M. tuberculosis (Levofloxacin, Moxifloxacin used as second-line agents).
Clinical Uses & Adverse Effects - Fluoro Fight & Fright
Clinical Uses (Fluoro Fight):
- Broad-spectrum: UTIs (cystitis, pyelonephritis), prostatitis.
- Respiratory: Pneumonia (Levofloxacin, Moxifloxacin - "respiratory quinolones"), sinusitis.
- GI: Traveler's diarrhea, typhoid (Ciprofloxacin).
- Bone, joint, skin/soft tissue infections.
- Anthrax (Ciprofloxacin).
- STIs: Gonorrhea (resistance increasing), Chlamydia.
Adverse Effects (Fluoro Fright):
- GI: Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, C. difficile colitis.
- Musculoskeletal: ⚠️ Tendinitis, tendon rupture (Achilles; BBW!), arthropathy (avoid in children < 18 yrs & pregnancy).
- CNS: Headache, dizziness, seizures, peripheral neuropathy (BBW!).
- Cardiac: QT prolongation (esp. Moxifloxacin).
- Skin: Phototoxicity, rash.
- Other: Dysglycemia. 📌 FLUORO: Fits, Loopy (CNS), Upset stomach, Ouch! (tendons/joints), Rash/Phototoxicity, Oh my heart! (QT).
⭐ Quinolones carry a Black Box Warning for tendinitis, tendon rupture, peripheral neuropathy, and CNS effects; they are generally contraindicated in pregnancy and children due to arthropathy risk.
High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Mechanism: Inhibit bacterial DNA gyrase & topoisomerase IV, blocking DNA replication.
- Spectrum: Broad; excellent Gram-negative (incl. Pseudomonas), atypical coverage. Newer ones add Gram-positive/anaerobic activity.
- Major Adverse Effects: Tendon rupture (BBW!), QT prolongation, phototoxicity, CNS disturbances.
- Contraindications: Avoid in pregnancy, children (cartilage damage), and myasthenia gravis.
- Key Interactions: Chelation with divalent/trivalent cations (↓ absorption); Ciprofloxacin inhibits CYP1A2.
- Primary Uses: Complicated UTIs, respiratory infections (respiratory FQs), bacterial gastroenteritis.
- Resistance: Rapid development via target enzyme mutations or efflux pumps.
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