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Medical Microbiology
Week 4
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Harsimran Kaur
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Cards (94)
What was the basis for early treatments of infections?
Natural remedies
and
toxic substances
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Which plant extract was discovered to be effective against malaria?
Quinine
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What was mercury used to treat?
Syphilis
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What oil was used to treat leprosy?
Chaulmoogra
oil
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Who introduced carbolic acid for disinfecting wounds?
Joseph Lister
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What replaced carbolic acid for wound disinfection?
Sulfa drugs
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What are the different categories of antimicrobials?
Bactericidal
: kill bacteria
Bacteriostatic
: inhibit bacterial growth
Sporicidal
: kill bacterial spores
Virucidal
: kill viruses
Antiprotozoal
: kill protozoa
Antifungal
: kill fungi
Anthelmintic
: kill parasitic worms
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Why has triclosan been banned in some countries?
Due to concerns about
antibiotic resistance
and
hormone disruption
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What are the principles of selective toxicity in antibiotics?
Target
bacterial cells
without harming mammalian cells
Concentrate in bacterial cells rather than
host cells
Effectiveness varies based on meeting these criteria
Side effects differ between specific
antibiotic agents
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What is the role of bactericidal antibiotics?
They kill
bacteria
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What do bacteriostatic antibiotics do?
They inhibit
bacterial
growth
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How can bacteriostatic antibiotics treat infections?
By preventing
bacterial
growth, allowing the immune system to eliminate the infection
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Which species is used for the production of penicillin?
Penicillium
chrysogenum
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What was the original species discovered by Fleming that was not effective for pharmaceutical use?
Penicillium rubens
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Who was involved in the discovery and development of penicillin?
Alexander Fleming
,
Howard Florey
,
Ernest Chain
, and
Norman Heatley
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What year did the Nobel Prize for medicine go to the discoverers of penicillin?
1945
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Who discovered streptomycin?
Selman
Waksman
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What is a serendipitous discovery?
A
chance
discovery
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Why are there many antibiotics that act on the cell wall?
Because the cell wall is a unique structure found only in
bacteria
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Why are there few antibiotics that act on nucleic acids?
Because nucleic acids are similar in structure to
human cells
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How can infection be managed by addressing stages 1 and 2 of the infection process?
Preventing
attachment
: physical barriers like condoms or vaccines
Inhibiting
penetration
: drugs that interfere with bacterial penetration mechanisms
Cell wall/membrane: antibiotics like
beta-lactams
disrupt the
cell wall
Nucleic acid
:
quinolones
and
metronidazole
interfere with DNA replication
Protein synthesis: antibiotics inhibit
protein synthesis
Anti-metabolites
:
sulfonamides
and
trimethoprim
disrupt metabolic pathways
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What is peptidoglycan composed of?
acetylmuramic acid
(NAM) and
N-acetylglucosamine
(NAG)
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What is the role of transpeptidase enzymes in bacterial cell walls?
They catalyze the formation of peptide cross-links between
NAM-NAG
monomers
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How does vancomycin inhibit bacterial cell wall synthesis?
By binding to
NAM-NAG
monomers and preventing
transpeptidase
enzymes from accessing their target
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What do autolysins do in the presence of vancomycin?
They break
peptide
bonds but cannot
form
new ones, leading to
cell wall weakening
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What is the mechanism of action of glycopeptides?
Bind to the intact
peptidoglycan
layer
Transpeptidase enzymes bind NAM-NAG monomers
Vancomycin
binds NAM-NAG monomers, inhibiting
transpeptidase
Autolysins
break peptide bonds, but no new bonds are formed
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How do glycopeptides prevent cell wall synthesis?
By binding to the
D-Ala-D-Ala
terminus of the
peptidoglycan
precursor
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Why is vancomycin regarded as an antibiotic of last resort?
Due to the increasing problem of
bacterial
resistance
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What are examples of bacteria that have developed resistance to vancomycin?
Vancomycin-resistant enterococci (
VRE
) and
VISA
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How do bacteria modify their cell wall precursors to resist vancomycin?
By replacing
D-alanine
with
D-lactate
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What is the mechanism of action of beta-lactam antibiotics?
Target
PBPs
essential for bacterial cell wall synthesis
Inhibit cross-link formation in
peptidoglycan
Lead to cell lysis
Bactericidal
, killing actively growing bacteria
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What do beta-lactamase enzymes do?
They hydrolyze the beta-lactam ring, rendering
antibiotics
inactive
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What are the different classes of beta-lactamase enzymes?
Penicillinases
Extended-spectrum beta-lactamases
(ESBLs)
Metallo-beta-lactamases
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What is the role of beta-lactamase inhibitors?
They bind to
beta-lactamase enzymes
,
preventing
them from inactivating
beta-lactam
antibiotics
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What is clavulanic acid used for?
As a
beta-lactamase
inhibitor combined with
amoxicillin
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What infections does penicillin remain effective for treating?
Streptococcal
infections,
Neisseria meningitidis
infections, and
syphilis
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What bacterial genus is most commonly associated with endocarditis?
Streptococcus
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How do broad-spectrum antibiotics differ from specialist antibiotics?
Broad-spectrum antibiotics have a
wider
range
of
activity
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What is the mechanism of action of polymyxins?
They disrupt
bacterial
cell membranes, leading to
cell death
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What is the risk associated with colistin in patients with impaired renal function?
Increased risk of
nephrotoxicity
and
neurotoxicity
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See all 94 cards
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