Tissue penetration of antimicrobials: Difference between revisions
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==Summary== |
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*† if inflammation present |
*† if inflammation present |
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==Prostate== |
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*Poorly penetrated by most antibiotics |
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*Penetration is higher with a high concentration gradient, high lipid solubility, low degree of ionization, high dissociation constant, low protein binding, and small molecular size |
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*[[Fluoroquinolones]] are the mainstay of therapy, though there is increasing resistance |
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*[[TMP-SMX]] often used, though conflicting data about its penetration into the prostate |
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*[[Minocycline]], [[doxycycline]], and [[macrolides]] achieve high levels in the prostate but are rarely indicated for the causative organisms |
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*Third-generation [[cephalosporins]] and [[carbapenems]] can be used |
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*[[Piperacillin]], [[aztreonam]], [[imipenem]], and some [[aminoglycosides]] are likely useful |
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[[Category:Antimicrobials]] |
[[Category:Antimicrobials]] |
Revision as of 18:44, 16 September 2020
Summary
Class | Antimicrobial | Blood | CNS | Urine | Prostate | Necrotic |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Antibiotics: β-Lactams | ||||||
Penicillins | β-lactamase inhibitors | – | ||||
ampicillin | + | – | ||||
piperacillin-tazobactam | +† | |||||
Cephalosporins | first-generation cephalosporins | – | – | |||
second-generation cephalosporins | – | |||||
third-generation cephalosporins | +† | |||||
cefepime | + | |||||
ceftazidime | + | + | ||||
Cephamycins | cephamycins | – | ||||
cefoxitin | – | |||||
Carbapenems | imipenem | + | ||||
Antibiotics: Non-β-Lactams | ||||||
Aminoglycosides | – | |||||
Chloramphenicol | chloramphenicol | + | ||||
Fluoroquinolones | –? | + | + | |||
Fosfomycin | fosfomycin | + | ||||
Lincosamides | clindamycin | – | + | |||
Macrolides | macrolides | – | + | |||
Nitrofurans | nitrofurantoin | – | – | + | – | – |
Nitroimidazoles | metronidazole | + | ||||
Rifamycins | rifampin | + | ||||
Sulfonamides | trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole | + | ||||
Tetracyclines | tetracyclines | – | + | |||
doxycycline | + | + | ||||
Antifungals | ||||||
Azoles | fluconazole | + | ||||
Class | Antimicrobial | Blood | CNS | Urine | Prostate | Necrotic |
- † if inflammation present
Prostate
- Poorly penetrated by most antibiotics
- Penetration is higher with a high concentration gradient, high lipid solubility, low degree of ionization, high dissociation constant, low protein binding, and small molecular size
- Fluoroquinolones are the mainstay of therapy, though there is increasing resistance
- TMP-SMX often used, though conflicting data about its penetration into the prostate
- Minocycline, doxycycline, and macrolides achieve high levels in the prostate but are rarely indicated for the causative organisms
- Third-generation cephalosporins and carbapenems can be used
- Piperacillin, aztreonam, imipenem, and some aminoglycosides are likely useful