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The Important Aspect of Infectious Diseases in Adults Department of Pharmacology & Therapy Faculty of Medicine Universitas Gadah Mada Yogyakarta Normal Microbial Flora of the Digestive System • Mouth • 1 ml saliva = millions of bacteria • Stomach and small intestine • Few organisms due to HCl and rapid movement of food • Large intestine • 100 billion bacteria per gram of feces • 40 % of fecal mass is microbial cell material • Lactobacillus, Bacteriodes, Enterobacter, E. coli. Proteus spp. Bacterial Diseases of Lower G.I. • Infections • Pathogens enters G.I. Tract and multiples • Bacteria may penetrate the intestinal mucosa or may pass to other systemic organs • Delay in appearance of symptoms while pathogen increases in number or invades tissue • Usually a fever • Intoxications • Ingestion of a preformed toxin • Sudden onset of symptoms ( few hours ) • Fever not always present Drugs for diarrhea OPIATES AND THEIR DERIVATIVES Opiates and opioid derivatives (a) delay the transit of intraluminal contents or (b) increase gut capacity, prolonging contact and absorption. Enkephalins, endogenous opioid substances, regulate fluid movement across the mucosa by stimulating absorptive processes. Limitations to the use of opiates include an addiction potential (a real concern with long-term use) and worsening of diarrhea in selected infectious diarrhea. Most opiates act through peripheral and central mechanisms with the exception of loperamide, which acts only peripherally. Loperamide is antisecretory; it inhibits the calcium-binding protein calmodulin, controlling chloride secretion. Loperamide, available as 2-mg capsules or 1 mg/5 mL solution (both are nonprescription products), is suggested for managing acute and chronic diarrhea The usual adult dose is initially 4 mg orally, followed by 2 mg after each loose stool, up to 16 mg/day. Used correctly, this agent has rare side effects such as dizziness and constipation. If the diarrhea is concurrent with a high fever or bloody stool, the patient should be referred to a physician. Also, diarrhea lasting 48 hours beyond initiating loperamide warrants medical attention. Loperamide can also be used in traveler’s diarrhea. It is comparable to bismuth subsalicylate for treatment of this disorder. Diphenoxylate is available as 2.5-mg tablets and as a 2.5 mg/5 mL solution. A small amount of atropine (0.025 mg) is included to discourage abuse. In adults, when taken as 2.5 to 5 mg three or four times daily, not to exceed a 20-mg total daily dose, diphenoxylate is rarely toxic. Some patients may complain of atropinism (blurred vision, dry mouth, and urinary hesitancy). Like loperamide, it should not be used in patients at risk of bacterial enteritis with Escherichia coli, Shigella, or Salmonella. Difenoxin, a diphenoxylate derivative, is also combined with atropine and has the same uses, precautions, and side effects. Marketed as 1-mg tablet, the adult dosage is 2 mg initially followed by 1 mg after each loose stool, not to exceed 8 mg/day. ADSORBENTS Adsorbents are used for symptomatic relief. These products, many not requiring a prescription, are nontoxic, but their effectiveness remains unproven. Adsorbents are nonspecific in their action; they adsorb nutrients, toxins, drugs, and digestive juices. Coadministration with other drugs reduces their bioavailability. The Food and Drug Administration overthe-counter review panel recommends only polycarbophil as an effective adsorbent. Polycarbophil absorbs 60 times its weight in water and can be used to treat both diarrhea and constipation. It is a nonprescription product and is sold as 500-mg chewable tablets. This hydrophilic nonabsorbable product is safe and may be taken four times daily, up to 6 g/day in adults. Bacterial Diseases of Lower G.I. • Diarrhea – infections and intoxications • Blood or mucus - dysentery • Abdominal cramps, nausea and vomiting • Defense mechanism to rid body of harmful material • Gastroenteritis • Inflammation of stomach or intestinal mucosa Escherichia Gastroenteritis • 1. ETEC - enterotoxigenic E. coli • Not invasive • Enterotoxin – watery diarrhea • 2. EIEC - enteroinvasive E. coli • Invades intestinal wall • Inflammation, fever & Shigella-like dysentery • 3. EHEC - enterhemorrhagic E. coli • E. coli • Found in intestines of animals, especially cattle • Hemorrhagic colitis – inflammation of colon with bleeding • HUS – Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome • Blood in urine leading to kidney failure (kidneys effected by toxin) Enterotoxigenic E. coli First line: Norfloxacin 400 mg or ciprofloxacin 500 mg orally twice daily × 3 days Alternatives: Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole DS tablet every 12 hours Shigellosis (Bacillary Dysentery) • Bacterial infection - Shigella sp. Gram (-), facultative, rods • • • • Shigella sonnei Shigella dysenteriae Shigella flexneri Shigella boydii Incubation period: • 12 hours to 2 weeks • Usually fever • Mild case of Shigellosis • Traveler’s Diarrhea Invasive (Dysentery-Like) Diarrhea Shigella species First line: Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole DS twice daily × 3–5 days Alternatives: Ofloxacin 300 mg, norfloxacin 400 mg, or ciprofloxacin 500 mg twice daily × 3 days, or nalidixic acid 1 g/day ×5 days; azithromycin 500 mg orally × 1, then 250 mg orally daily × 4 days. Salmonellosis (Salmonella Gastroenteritis) • Bacterial Infection – Salmonella sp. • Salmonella • Gram (-), facultative, non-spore forming rods • Found in G.I. Tract of humans and many animals • All are considered pathogenic • Taxonomy • Use serotype rather than species • Over 2000 serotypes (50 common in U.S.) • Salmonella arizonae Salmonella brazil • Salmonella atlanta Salmonella pakistan • Salmonella berlin Salmonella california Salmonellosis • Incubation time 12 – 36 hours • Bacteria invade the intestinal mucosa and multiply • May pass thru mucosa into lymphatic or circulatory system and become systemic • Fever, abdominal pain, cramps and diarrhea Salmonellosis • 1 billion Salmonella per gram of feces • Mortality rate < 1 % • Higher in infants and elderly • Recovery in a few days • Some may shed bacteria in feces for 6 months Salmonellosis • Contamination • Meats, poultry, eggs, pet reptiles (turtles) • Undercooked or Raw Eggs Salmonella Nontyphoidal First line: Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole DS twice daily; ofloxacin 300 mg, norfloxacin 400 mg, or ciprofloxacin 500 mg twice daily × 5 days; or ceftriaxone 2 g IV daily or cefotaxime 2 g IV three times daily × 5 days Alternatives: Azithromycin 1000 mg orally × 1 day, followed by 500 mg orally once daily × 6 days Typhoid Fever • Salmonella typhi - most virulent Salmonella • Only found in humans (feces) • Systemic disease • Spreads thru body, found in blood, urine, feces Enteric fever First line: Ciprofloxacin 500 mg orally twice daily × 3–14 days (ofloxacin and perfloxacin equally efficacious) Alternatives: Azithromycin 1000 mg orally × 1 day, followed by 500 mg daily × 5 days; or cefixime, cefotaxime, and cefuroxime; or chloramphenicol 500 mg four times daily orally or IV × 14 days Campylobacter First line Erythromycin 500 mg orally twice daily × 5 days; azithromycin 1000 mg orally × 1 day, followed by 500 mg daily or clarithromycin 500 mg orally twice daily Alternative: Ciprofloxacin 500 mg or norfloxacin 400 mg orally twice daily × 5 days Cholera • Vibrio cholerae - Gram (-) • Endemic in Asia and India • Cholera toxin • Secretion of Cl- leads to H2O loss and diarrhea • 12 – 20 liters of fluid per day ( 3 – 5 gallons) Enterotoxigenic (Cholera-Like) Diarrhea Vibrio cholerae First line agents Doxycline 300 mg oral single dose; tetracycline 500 mg orally four times daily × 3 days; trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole tablet twice daily × 3 days; norfloxacin 400 mg orally twice daily × 3 days; ciprofloxacin 500 mg orally twice daily × 3 days or 1 g orally single dose Alternatives agents 50 mg/kg IV every 6 hours, erythromycin 250–500 mg PO every 6–8 hours, and furazolidone C. Difficile First line: Metronidazole 250 mg four times daily to 500 mg three times daily × 10 days Alternatives: Vancomycin 125 mg orally four times daily × 10 days; bacitracin 20,000–25,000 units four times daily × 7–10 days Traveler’s Diarrhea Prophylaxis Norfloxacin 400 mg or ciprofloxacin 500 mg orally daily (in Asia, Africa, and South America); trimethoprim-sulfamethoxaxole DS tablet orally daily (in Mexico) Treatment Norfloxacin 400 mg or ciprofloxacin 500 mg orally twice daily × 3 days, or trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole tablet orally twice daily × 3 days (in Mexico), or azithromycin 500 mg orally once daily × 3 days (only in areas of high prevalence of quiniolone-resistant Campylobacter species, such as Thailand) Food Poisoning from Seafood • Vibrio parahaemolytica • Found in salt H2O estuaries • Associated with poisoning from • • • • Raw oysters Shell fish Shrimp crabs ANTIMOTILITY AGENTS Agents that inhibit peristalsis such as diphenoxylate and loperamide are contraindicated in most toxinmediated diarrheal illnesses (enterohemorrhagic E. coli, pseudomembranous colitis, shigellosis). Slowing of fecal transit time is thought to result in extended toxin-associated damage. On the other hand, in traveler’s diarrhea, a combination of appropriate antibiotics and loperamide controls symptoms within 10 hours. Rotavirus Infection Oral fluid and electrolyte replacement is the cornerstone of treatment. Oral Lactobacillus therapy may reduce the duration of diarrhea and of viral excretion. There is no role for antibiotics in acute infection. Bismuth subsalicylate, although shown to decrease the duration of diarrhea and stool output, is not recommended for routine use because of the selflimiting nature of the disease and the risk of bismuth subsalicylate overdose. Antimotility agents are not recommended because they have not been shown to decrease the duration or volume of diarrhea. Staphylococcal Food Poisoning (Staphylococcal intoxication) • Ingesting an enterotoxin by Staph. aureus • Staphylococci • • • • High resistance to heat Resistant to drying out Resistant to high osmotic pressures Resistant to high salt conc. • Found in nasal passages and hands • Contaminate food * 1 million bacteria per gram of food to produce enough enterotoxin to cause illness Most reliable method of preventing Staphylococcal intoxication: • Adequate refrigeration during storage to prevent toxin production • Toxin • Triggers vomiting reflex center of brain • Abdominal cramps & diarrhea • Recovery usually complete in 24 hours. • Mortality rate – 0 % in healthy people Treatment: Supportive Peptic Ulcers • Helicobacter pylori – microaerophilic spiral • 30% - 50 % of normal pop. are infected, but only 15% of those develop ulcers • • H2O + urea urease ammonia + CO2 • Urea Breath Test • Swallow radio-active urea • If positive, patient will exhale radio-active CO2 within 30 minutes Therapy of Helicobacter pylori Infection Triple therapy × 14 days: [Proton pump inhibitor + clarithromycin 500 mg + (metronidazole 500 mg or amoxicillin 1 g)] twice a day. (Tetracycline 500 mg can be substituted for amoxicillin or metronidazole.) Quadruple therapy × 14 days: Proton pump inhibitor twice a day + metronidazole 500 mg three times daily + (bismuth subsalicylate 525 mg + tetracycline 500 mg four times daily) or H2 receptor antagonist twice a day + (bismuth subsalicylate 525 mg + metronidazole 250 mg + tetracycline 500 mg) four times daily Dosages: Proton pump inhibitors: Omeprazole: 20 mg Lansoprazole: 30 mg Rabeprazole: 20 mg Pantoprazole: 40 mg Esomeprazole: 40 mg H2 receptor antagonists: Cimetidine: 400 mg Famotidine: 20 mg Nizatidine: 150 mg Ranitidine: 150 mg Farmakologi Obat Pada Infeksi Hati dan Empedu Eti Nurwening Sholikhah Bagian Farmakologi dan Terapi Fakultas Kedokteran Universitas Gadah Mada Hepatitis • Inflammation of the liver • Viral Hepatitis • 5 different viruses • • • • • Hepatitis A Hepatitis B Hepatitis C Hepatitis D Hepatitis E Hepatitis A (Infectious Hepatitis) • HAVss RNA no envelope • Enters via oral route, multiplies in G.I. Tract spreads to liver • Virus is shed in feces • HAV is resistant to normal chlorine disinfectants used for water • HAV can survive several days on surfaces (cutting boards) • 50% of infections are subclinical • Symptoms • Nausea • Fever diarrhea chills abdominal discomfort jaundice • Recovery results in lifelong Immunity The ultimate goal in treating acute viral hepatitis is to return the individual to the previous state of health. Intermediate goals while the individual is acutely symptomatic and infectious include decreasing morbidity and acute mortality, normalizing aminotransferases (to stop hepatic inflammation), stopping viral replication in the host, and ultimately eradicating the virus. Pharmacologic agents offer no clear benefit in the treatment of patients infected with HAV. Corticosteroids have been used in patients with acute HAV when cholestatic hepatitis or fulminant hepatic failure is evident. Hepatitis B (Serum Hepatitis) • HBVds DNA envelope • Transmitted by blood, semen, saliva, breast milk • 50% cases asymptomatic • Symptoms • Loss of appetite fever joint pains jaundice • 10% become chronic carriers of HBV • Chronic carriers are 200 times more likely to develop liver cancer • HBV Vaccination is required Numerous pharmacologic agents with varying modes of action are in clinical development. Three agents are currently approved for use in the United States by the Food and Drug Administration and include interferon-α2b (IFN-α2b), lamivudine, and adefovir Dipivoxil. No drug therapy is recommended for patients with normal ALT values because this group responds poorly to therapy. Lamivudine therapy should be used for exacerbations because it has a rapid onset of effect. In contrast, IFN-α2b onset of action may not be rapid enough to prevent hepatic decompensation. Interferons IFN-α2b is currently the only interferon approved by the FDA for management of chronic HBV. As compared to a placebo response of 12% to 17%, 33% to 37% of patients respond to IFN-α2b therapy by losing HBeAg and HBV DNA.42 Even though most of these patients will maintain a long-term response, the low overall response rates combined with the adverse effects and need for subcutaneous dosing make IFNα2b a less-than-ideal agent. Pretreatment predictors of response to IFN-α2b include low viral load (HBV DNA <200 copies/mL) and high ALT (>100). For this subset of chronic HBV patients, an IFNα2b regimen is a rational option, although these same parameters Lamivudine Lamivudine (Epivir-HBV, 3TC) is a nucleoside analog that competitively inhibits viral reverse transcriptase and terminates proviral DNA chain extension. Because it does not affect host response, it suppresses viral replication but does not directly eliminate the virus from the hepatocytes. Its efficacy is also not associated with, or dependent upon, the flare response seen with interferon. Like IFN-α2b though, lamivudine demonstrates higher response rates in patients with elevated transaminases (ALT >100) and lower viral loads Adefovir Dipivoxil Adefovir is a nucleotide analog of deoxyadenosine monophosphate that is active against retroviruses (like HIV), herpes viruses, and hepadnaviruses. Adefovir dipivoxil 10 mg by mouth once daily for 48 weeks has been approved for use in adult patients with chronic HBV who are either treatment na¨ıve or have lamivudineresistant HBV. This agent is also active against HIV but requires higher (125mg daily) doses for treatment. Consequently, the use of adefovir in HBV patients coinfected with HIV may induce antiretroviral resistance. Hepatitis C (Non A, Non B Hepatitis) • HCVss RNA envelope The pharmacologic management of acute HCV is confounded by limitations in the ability to recognize the infection in mainly asymptomatic patients. Trials evaluating the role of interferon therapy included small sample sizes and used heterogeneous end-points to evaluate outcomes. Despite these limitations, SVRs in the range of 83% to 100% have been reported with IFN-α monotherapy in small uncontrolled trials, suggesting the potential advantages of early therapy. However, the timing, type of regimen, and duration of therapy remain undefined. The management of treatment-na¨ıve patients with chronicHCVis betterdefined with recent large randomized controlled trials comparing pegylated interferon plus ribavirin to interferon and ribavirin Acute Cholecystitis Primary agents: First-generation cephalosporin Alternative: Aminoglycoside plus ampicillin if severe infection Cholangitis Primary agent: Aminoglycoside with ampicillin with or without clindamycin or metronidazole Alternative: Use vancomycin instead of ampicillin if patient is allergic to penicillin