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Cipro Ciprofloxacin

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Effective against Gm ? rods, Gm , anaerobes; effective against most -lactamases ... Disease caused by Bacillus anthracis, a gram-positive spore-forming bacteria ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cipro Ciprofloxacin


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Cipro (Ciprofloxacin)
  • Cipro
  • Antibiotic effective treatment against Anthrax
    bacteria
  • Also used in the treatment of UTIs and
    Pyelonephritis
  • Kidney infection caused by food borne illness E.
    coli
  • Treats bacterial infections from bronchitis to
    gonorrhea
  • Antimicrobial HIV/AIDS medication

4
Structure of Cipro
  • Cipro XR
  • Quinolone

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Drug Classification
  • Quinolones antimicrobial agent
  • Most have excellent bioavailability
  • Adverse effects nausea, headache, dizziness, and
    confusion
  • Rapidly inhibit DNA synthesis by promoting
    bacterial DNA cleavage in the enzyme components
    of DNA gyrase and type IV topoisomerase,
    resulting in rapid bacterial death
  • Exhibits concentration-dependant bacterial
    killing
  • Well absorbed following oral administration
  • Drug administered every 12 to 24 hrs elimination
    half-lives range from 1.5 to 16 hrs.

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Mechanism of Action
  • Inhibits bacterial nuclear DNA synthesis
  • Rapid death of bacteria
  • Target sight for Cipro is the enzyme DNA gyrase
    (topoisomerase II)
  • Responsible for the supercoiling and uncoiling of
    the DNA
  • Supercoiling allows long DNA to fit into a cell
  • Uncoiling required for replication,
    transcription, and DNA repair
  • Cipro prevents bacterial DNA from creating
    enzymes and reproducing

7
Side Effects
  • Gastrointestinal intolerance
  • Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
  • Photosensitivity
  • Occasionally CNS toxicity
  • Dizziness and tremors

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Pharmacokinetics/Chemistry
  • Absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract after
    oral administration
  • The unrestricted bioavailability is 70 with no
    significant loss by first pass metabolism
  • Elimination half-life is approximately 4 hrs
  • Urinary excretion of Cipro complete in 24hrs

9
FDA approval
  • Approved on July 28th, 2000
  • Approved for post-exposure to inhalation anthrax
  • Approved under accelerated approval regulations

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Ciprofloxacin Antibiotic for the Treatment of
Anthrax

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Anthrax as a Biological Weapon
  • LD one millionth of a gram
  • LD50 2,500 to 55,000 inhaled anthrax spores
  • If 100 kg of anthrax spores were released into
    Washington, DC, an estimated 130,000 to 3 million
    would die.

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How is anthrax spread?
  • Inhalation - spores can be inhaled in
    contaminated soil.
  • cutaneous (skin) - spread by biting insects that
    have fed on infected hosts (95 of anthrax cases)
  • gastrointestinal caused by ingesting
    undercooked meat or unchlorinated water that
    harbors anthrax bacteria

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Symptoms of Anthrax
  • Inhalation occurs in two stages that surface in
    approximately 7-10 days
  • Stage 1 - begins with fever, cough, headache,
    vomiting, chills, weakness, abdominal pain,
    shortness of breath and chest pain.
    (hours-several days)
  • Stage 2 - fever, difficulty breathing, sweating,
    a bluish discoloration of the skin, shock, and
    finally death (2-4days)
  • Cutaneous occurs within 12 days of exposure
  • localized swelling of the skin, which enlarges
    into an ulcer and discharges a clear fluid. Then,
    a black scab will form that falls off in one to
    two weeks.
  • Gastrointestinal occurs within several days
  • symptoms include nausea, vomiting blood,
    abdominal pain, bloody diarrhea, and weakness
  • Results in death for 25 to 60 percent of cases

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Anthrax Life Cycle
http//www.ph.ucla.edu/epi/bioter/anthraxlifecycle
.html
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Anthrax
  • Disease caused by Bacillus anthracis, a
    gram-positive spore-forming bacteria
  • anthrax spores are found in the soil
  • Spores have no smell, taste, or color and are too
    small to be seen by eye
  • need an environment that is rich in amino acids,
    nucleosides and glucose to germinate
  • Once the germination begins, the disease
    progresses very rapidly
  • Not contagious

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Anthrax in a host
  • bacteria attacks the lymph nodes
  • three proteins are created by the bacteria
    protective antigen (PA)
  • edema factor (EF)
  • lethal factor (LF)
  • the lethal factor cuts mitogen-activated protein
    kinase, an enzyme that controls cell growth and
    is involved in cellular signal transmission
  • disrupting signal transmission results in anthrax
    symptoms

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Fatality Statistics of Anthrax
  • Cutaneous 20
  • Inhalation 75
  • Gastrointestinal - 25-60
  • Statistics according to the Center for Disease
    Control (CDC)

18
Diagnosis and Treatment
  • Diagnosis through Gram-staining
  • A blood sample is cultured and then gram-stained
    to identify the genus level (Bacillus family)
  • Cutaneous - vesicular fluid and bloodInhalation
    - blood, cerebrospinal fluid, or chest
    X-rayGastrointestinal - blood
  • Treatment
  • Anthrax can be treated with the antibiotics,
    penicillin, doxycylcine, or ciprofloxacin.
  • If inhalation anthrax is not caught soon, then
    the bacteria can be destroyed but the toxins
    remaining in the system will kill the host.

Gram-stained anthrax
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