List Of Antibiotics
Following
is a list of antibiotics, sorted by class. The highest division is between bactericidal antibiotics and bacteriostatic antibiotics. Bactericidals kill bacteria directly where bacteriostatics
prevent them from dividing. However, these classifications are based on
laboratory behavior; in practice, both of these are capable of ending a
bacterial infection.[1]
Antibiotics
by class
|
|||||
Generic
name
|
Brand
names
|
Mechanism
of action
|
|||
Infections
caused by Gram-negative bacteria, such as Escherichia coli andKlebsiella particularly Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Effective against Aerobic
bacteria (not obligate/facultative anaerobes) and tularemia.
|
|||||
Mycifradin
|
|||||
Discontinued
|
prevents bacterial cell division
by inhibiting cell wall synthesis.
|
||||
Bactericidal for both
Gram-positive and Gram-negative organisms and therefore useful for empiric
broad-spectrum antibacterial coverage. (Note MRSA resistance to this class.)
|
§ Gastrointestinal upset and
diarrhea
§ Nausea
§ Seizures
§ Headache
§ Rash and allergic reactions
|
Inhibition of cell wall synthesis
|
|||
Good coverage against Gram
positive infections.
|
§ Gastrointestinal upset and
diarrhea
§ Nausea (if alcohol taken
concurrently)
§ Allergic reactions
|
Same mode of action as other beta-lactam
antibiotics:
disrupt the synthesis of thepeptidoglycan layer of bacterial cell walls.
|
|||
Less gram positive cover, improved
gram negative cover.
|
§ Gastrointestinal upset and
diarrhea
§ Nausea (if alcohol taken
concurrently)
§ Allergic reactions
|
Same mode of action as other beta-lactam
antibiotics:
disrupt the synthesis of thepeptidoglycan layer of bacterial cell walls.
|
|||
§ Gastrointestinal upset and
diarrhea
§ Nausea (if alcohol taken
concurrently)
§ Allergic reactions
|
Same mode of action as other beta-lactam antibiotics: disrupt the synthesis of thepeptidoglycan layer of bacterial cell walls.
|
||||
Omnicef, Cefdiel
|
|||||
Cefizox
|
|||||
Covers
pseudomonal infections.
|
§ Gastrointestinal upset and
diarrhea
§ Nausea (if alcohol taken
concurrently)
§ Allergic reactions
|
Same mode of action as other beta-lactam
antibiotics:
disrupt the synthesis of thepeptidoglycan layer of bacterial cell walls.
|
|||
Used to treat MRSA
|
§ Gastrointestinal upset and
diarrhea
§ Nausea (if alcohol taken
concurrently)
§ Allergic reactions
|
Same mode of action as other beta-lactam
antibiotics:
disrupt the synthesis of thepeptidoglycan layer of bacterial cell walls.
|
|||
Targocid
|
|||||
Serious staph-, pneumo-, and
streptococcal infections in penicillin-allergic patients, also anaerobic
infections; clindamycin topically for acne
|
|||||
Lincocin
|
|||||
Bind to the membrane and cause
rapid depolarization, resulting in a loss of membrane potential leading to
inhibition of protein, DNA and RNA synthesis
|
|||||
§ Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea
(especially at higher doses)
|
inhibition of bacterial protein biosynthesis by binding reversibly to the
subunit 50Sof the bacterial ribosome, thereby inhibiting translocation
of peptidyl tRNA.
|
||||
TAO
|
|||||
Trobicin
|
|||||
Same mode of action as other beta-lactam
antibiotics:
disrupt the synthesis of thepeptidoglycan layer of bacterial cell walls.
|
|||||
Furoxone
|
|||||
§ Gastrointestinal upset and
diarrhea
§ Brain and kidney damage (rare)
|
Same mode of action as other beta-lactam
antibiotics:
disrupt the synthesis of thepeptidoglycan layer of bacterial cell walls.
|
||||
Principen
|
|||||
Geocillin
|
|||||
Tegopen
|
|||||
Dynapen
|
|||||
Mezlin
|
|||||
Staphcillin
|
|||||
Unipen
|
|||||
Prostaphlin
|
|||||
Pentids
|
|||||
Pen-Vee-K
|
|||||
Pipracil
|
|||||
Negaban
|
|||||
Ticar
|
|||||
Penicillin combinations
|
|||||
Augmentin
|
|||||
Unasyn
|
|||||
Zosyn
|
|||||
Timentin
|
|||||
Eye, ear or bladder infections;
usually applied directly to the eye or inhaled into the lungs; rarely given
by injection
|
Kidney and nerve damage (when
given by injection)
|
Inhibits isoprenyl
pyrophosphate, a molecule that carries the building blocks of thepeptidoglycan bacterial cell
wall outside of the inner membrane [4]
|
|||
Coly-Mycin-S
|
Interact with the gram negative bacterial outer membrane and cytoplasmic
membrane. It displaces bacterial counter ions, which destabilizes
the outer membrane. They act like a detergent against the cytoplasmic
membrane, which alters its permeability. Polymyxin B and E are bactericidal
even in an isosmotic solution.
|
||||
Urinary tract infections, bacterial prostatitis, community-acquired pneumonia, bacterial
diarrhea, mycoplasmal
infections, gonorrhea
|
inhibit the bacterial DNA gyrase or the topoisomerase IV enzyme, thereby inhibiting DNA replication and transcription.
|
||||
Penetrex
|
|||||
Maxaquin
|
|||||
NegGram
|
|||||
Noroxin
|
|||||
Floxin, Ocuflox
|
|||||
Withdrawn
|
|||||
Withdrawn
|
|||||
Withdrawn
|
|||||
Withdrawn
|
|||||
Sulfamylon
|
Urinary tract
infections (except
sulfacetamide, used for eye infections, and mafenide and silver
sulfadiazine, used topically for burns)
|
§ Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea
§ Crystals in urine
§ Sensitivity to sunlight
|
Folate synthesis inhibition. They are competitive
inhibitors of
the enzymedihydropteroate synthetase, DHPS. DHPS catalyses the
conversion of PABA (para-aminobenzoate) to dihydropteroate,
a key step in folate synthesis. Folate is necessary for the cell to synthesize nucleic acids (nucleic acids are essential
building blocks of DNA and RNA), and in its absence cells will
be unable to divide.
|
||
Sulfonamidochrysoidine(archaic)
|
|||||
Sulamyd, Bleph-10
|
|||||
Micro-Sulfon
|
|||||
Silvadene
|
|||||
Thiosulfil Forte
|
|||||
Gantanol
|
|||||
Azulfidine
|
|||||
Gantrisin
|
|||||
Proloprim, Trimpex
|
|||||
Bactrim, Septra
|
|||||
Declomycin
|
Syphilis, chlamydial infections, Lyme disease, mycoplasmal
infections, acnerickettsial infections, *malaria *Note: Malaria is caused by a
protist and not a bacterium.
|
§ Gastrointestinal upset
§ Sensitivity to sunlight
§ Potential toxicity to mother and
fetus during pregnancy
§ Enamel hypoplasia (staining of
teeth; potentially permanent)
§ transient depression of bone
growth
|
inhibiting the binding of aminoacyl-tRNA to the mRNA-ribosome complex. They do so mainly by binding to the 30S ribosomal
subunit in the mRNA translationcomplex.
|
||
Lamprene
|
|||||
Avlosulfon
|
|||||
Capastat
|
|||||
Seromycin
|
|||||
Myambutol
|
|||||
Trecator
|
Inhibits peptide synthesis
|
||||
I.N.H.
|
|||||
Aldinamide
|
|||||
Rifadin, Rimactane
|
Reddish-orange sweat, tears, and
urine
|
||||
Mycobutin
|
rash, discolored urine, GI
symptoms
|
||||
Priftin
|
|||||
Others
|
|||||
meningitis, MRSA, topical use, or for low cost internal treatment.
Historic: typhus,cholera. gram negative, gram positive,anaerobes
|
Inhibits bacterial protein
synthesis by binding to the 50S subunit of the ribosome
|
||||
Monurol
|
|||||
Produces toxic free radicals which disrupt DNA and proteins.
This non-specific mechanism is responsible for its activity against a variety
of bacteria, amoebae, and protozoa.
|
|||||
Xifaxan
|
|||||
Lacks known anemic side-effects.
|
A chloramphenicol analog. May
inhibit bacterial protein synthesis by binding to the 50S subunit of the
ribosome
|
||||
Tindamax Fasigyn
|
protozoan infections
|
upset stomach, bitter taste, and
itchiness
|
|||
Generic Name
|
Brand Names
|
Mechanism of action
|
No comments:
Post a Comment