An antimicrobial is an agent that interferes with the growth and reproduction of bacteria. They may either kill or inhibit the growth of bacteria. There are different types of these drugs in use and a nurse should know when to prescribe each. Take up the quiz below and learn more on them.
Penicillin G
Penicillin V
Benzathine penicillin
Ampicillin
Procaine Penicillin
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Highest G+ coverage
High antipseudomonal activity
Eliminated through filtration
Some G- coverage
B-lactamase sensitive
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G+ cocci
G- cocci
G+ bacilli
Treponema Pallidum
All of the above
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Hypersensitivity
Diarrhea
A and B
This test is killing me
I can't wait till i'm done with it tomorrow
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Pen. G
Pen. V
Pen. C
Pen. H
Pen. B
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Nafcillin
Ampicillin
Cloxacillin
Oxacillin
A, C, and D
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Lower G+ activity, and some G- coverage
Some anaerobe coverage
Some are acid stable (oxacillin)
Hepatic metabolism and renal excretion
All of the above
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Nafcillin and Ampicillin
Amoxicillin and Methicillin
Ampicillin and Amoxicillin
Cloxacillin and Oxacillin
None of the above
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False
True
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Is only administered parenterally
Is obtained when Amoxicillin is combined with sulbactam
Can treat B-lactamase-producing organisms due to clavulanic acid
Should not be offered to patients with a previous history of seizures
All of the above
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Comprised of Ticarcillin and Piperacillin
Extended spectrum plus enteric G- bacilli
Acid resistant (can be administered orally)
Renal excretion
Susceptible to B-lactam
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Inactivation ( destruction by b-lactamase)
Decreased permeability of bact. cell wall or lack of cell wall
Alteration in PBP's to hinder penicillin binding
Inactivation of autolytic enzymes
All of the above
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Allergy-anaphylactic shock (give Epinephrine)
Electrolyte imbalance
GI dsturbances
Superinfections
All of the above
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True
False
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Good G+ coverage and moderate G- activity
No antipseudomonal activity
Renal excretion
Acid resistance-orally given
All of the above are true
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Have lower G+ activity
Have higher G- activity
Lack antipseudomonal activity and are acid sensitive
Have B-lactamase resistance and are excreted by the kidney
Include Cephaclor and Cefprozil
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Metabolized by the liver and excreted by the kidney
Have good CNS penetration (cefoperazone, cefotaxime)
Are very effective against G-, less effective against G+, and have antipseudomonal activity (few)
Acid resistant and increased B-lactamase resistance
All of the above
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Is the only 4th generation cephalosporin
Is more resistant to B-lactamase and can only be given parenterally
Has antipseudomonal activity and has better G+ coverage
Is excreted renally
All of the above
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They're fairly safer than penicillins
Still cause superinfections
Can cause dose-dependend renal tubular necrosis
Synergistic nephrotoxicity with aminoglycosides
All of the above
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Are resistant to B-lactamases
Have no activity agains G+ and anaerobes
Acid sensitive (IM/IV only)
No cross-sensitivity with other b-lactam antibiotics
All of the above
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Are Imipenem and Meropenem
Given IV only
Broad spectrum activity but pseudomonal resistance may develop (combination with aminoglycosides is recommended)
Imipenem can cause seizures
All of the above
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Prevents peptidoglycan elongation and is bactericidal
Is very useful against penicillin/methicillin-resistant S. aureus
VRE are usually resistant to all other antibiotics (drug of last resort)
Adverse effects are ototoxicity, nephrotoxicity, and red man syndrome (flushing from histamine release)
All of the above
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Inhibits transmembrane transport of the peptidoglycan subunits
Is a cyclic polypeptide
Is used topically due to nephrotoxicity
A, B, and C are correct
All of the above are incorrect
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Is a broad-spectrum antibiotic
Inhibits attachment of peptide side chain to the peptidoglycan
Used only to treat TB (second line)
All of the above
None of the above
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Cell wall formatio inhibitors
Inhibitors of cell membrane permeability
Inhibitors of protein synthesis
Broad-spectrum
Penicillins are among them
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Bind the 50S subunit irreversibly
Effective againt lots of G+, but majority of G- is resistant to it
All are taken orally
All except Azithromycin are eliminated by bile and through feces
All of the above
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Powerless agains many G- bacteria
The DOC for treatment of Legionnaire's disease and M. pneumoniae
All of the above are correct
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Reversibly binds 50S ribosomal subunit and is metabolized by the liver
Against a wide range of G+ aerobics and anaerobic G+ and G-
Bactericidal or bacteriostatic and can cross the placenta readily
Can be given in any way but exhibits poor CNS penetration
All of the above
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Streptomycin, gentamycin, tobramycin, amikacin, and neomycin
Bind 30 S subunit
Poor cns penetration (except in case of inflammation) and should be given parenterally
Rapidly excreted by the kidney
All of the above
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Reversibly binds 50S subunit and is bacteriostatic
Broad spectrum and rapid absorption after oral consumption
Best CNS penetration and effective against anaerobes
Liver metabolism, renal excretion
All of the above
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Bind reversibly to 30S
Bacteriostatic in therapeutic concentrations
Deposited in bones/teeth (Fe2+)
Used to treat severe acne (topical/oral administration)
All of the above
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Compete with PABA in folate synthesis
Generally bacteriostatic
Oral absorption
Liver metabolism and renal excretion
All of the above
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Fluoroquinolones (ciprofloxacin, ofloxacin, moxifloxacin)
Bactericidal/inhibition of DNA gyrase
Effective against G- aerobic cocci and antipseudomonal
Prophylaxis against antrax, oral, excellent tissue penetration
All of the above
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Mechanism not understood
Bactericidal (ROS)
Effective against anaerobes
Disulfiram-like effect
All of the above
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Standard prophylaxis-amoxicillin
Allergic to penicillins-ampicillins
Unable to take orally-ampicillin
Allergic to penicillin and can't swallow pills-cindamycin/cefazolin
Allergic to penicillin-clindamycin/cephalexin/azithromycin
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