Thursday, July 4, 2013

59 - Characteristics of antituberculous drugs

DrugMost Common Side EffectsTests for Side EffectsDrug InteractionsIsoniazid-
Bactericidal to both extracellular and intracellular organisms. Pyridoxine, 10 mg orally daily as prophylaxis for neuritis; 50–100 mg orally daily as treatment.Peripheral neuropathy, hepatitis, rash, mild CNS effects.AST and ALT; neurologic examination.Phenytoin (synergistic); disulfiram.Rifampin-
Bactericidal to all populations of organisms. Colors urine and other body secretions orange. Discoloring of contact lenses.Hepatitis, fever, rash, flu-like illness, gastrointestinal upset, bleeding problems, renal failure.Rifampin inhibits the effect of oral contraceptives, quinidine, corticosteroids, warfarin, methadone, digoxin, oral hypoglycemics; aminosalicylic acid may interfere with absorption of rifampin. Significant interactions with protease inhibitors and nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors.Pyrazinamide-
Bactericidal to intracellular organisms.Hyperuricemia, hepatotoxicity, rash, gastrointestinal upset, joint aches.Ethambutol-
Bacteriostatic to both intracellular and extracellular organisms. Mainly used to inhibit development of resistant mutants. Use with caution in renal disease or when ophthalmologic testing is not feasibleOptic neuritis (reversible with discontinuance of drug; rare at 15 mg/kg); rash.Red-green color discrimination and visual acuity (difficult to test in children under 3 years of age).Streptomycin-
Bactericidal to extracellular organisms. Use with caution in older patients or those with renal disease.Eighth nerve damage, nephrotoxicity.Vestibular function (audiograms); BUN and creatinine.Neuromuscular blocking agents may be potentiated and cause prolonged paralysis.AST, aspartate aminotransferase; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; CBC, complete blood count; BUN, blood urea nitrogen.


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