jan larmouth, ms, cic director, infection prevention and

25
Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and IV Resource SNHMC

Upload: others

Post on 16-Oct-2021

8 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC

Director, Infection Prevention and IV Resource

SNHMC

Page 2: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Biochemistry is not scary.

We all live in a 3 dimensional world.

Life happens at the molecular level.

Page 3: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Wall, plasmid, DNA

Page 4: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Gram positive cocci Gram negative bacilli (rods)

Page 5: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and
Page 6: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Make things happen!

Page 7: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Different classes have different chemical structures

Penicillin (methicillin)

Page 8: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Glycopeptides (vancomycin)

Page 9: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Beta-lactams (cephalosporins)

Page 10: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Disrupt an essential process that is necessary for cell life: ◦ Cell wall synthesis

◦ DNA replication

Organisms change their structure and produce chemicals that protect them from the ABX

Page 11: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Gram positive cocci

Clonal organism – not many spontaneous mutations

Normal skin flora – 30% of population

Methicillin worked well until around 1960s

Page 12: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and
Page 13: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

TP – transpeptidase

-lactam ring binds to TP (penicillin binding protein)

No cross links are formed = cell ruptures

Page 14: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

MRSA are genetically slightly different - acquired the mec A gene - PBP = different

Methicillin doesn’t fit anymore

Page 15: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Gram positive cocci

Found in the gut – “fecal patina”

Some species – non-pathogenic and intrinsically resistant to many ABX

E. faecium/E. faecalis have acquired resistance to vancomycin

Page 16: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

3 different mechanisms of action:

◦ Inhibits cross linking in the cell wall

◦ Interferes with RNA production

◦ Damages the plasma membrane

Page 17: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and
Page 18: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and
Page 19: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Nomenclature differs: ◦ not the bug but the enzyme

◦ Not one genus/species

Many species: E. coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter cloacae, Proteus mirabilis, etc.

Most common: E. coli; K. pneumoniae

Page 20: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

First Generation: cefazolin, cefalexin, cefadroxil

Second Generation: cefamandole, cefoxitin, cefaclor, cefuroxime, loracarbef, cefotetan

Third generation: cefotaxime, cefpodoxime, ceftizoxime, ceftriaxone, ceftazidime, cefoperazone

Fourth generation: cefepime, cefozopran, cefpirome, cefquinome

Page 21: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and

Activity is different

Generation1: ◦ Staph and Enterobacteriaceae

Generations 2, 3 and 4: ◦ Structure able to resist beta-lactamases – broader

spectrum

Page 22: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and
Page 23: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and
Page 24: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and
Page 25: Jan Larmouth, MS, CIC Director, Infection Prevention and