5 • 716 Ratings
🗓️ 28 August 2025
⏱️ 16 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | Hey all, welcome back to the real life pharmacology podcast. I'm your host, pharmacist, Eric Christensen. |
| 0:04.9 | Thank you so much for listening today. As always, go take advantage of that free top 200 study guide, |
| 0:11.6 | great refresher if you're out in practice. Also, if you're taking board exams, preparing for that, |
| 0:17.1 | definitely a no-brainer to have. It's a 31-page PDF. I highlight some of the most important things |
| 0:22.4 | you're going to see in clinical practice as well as some of those things that are going to show up |
| 0:26.3 | on exams as well. So you can get that, real-life pharmacology.com. Simply an email is all that |
| 0:33.6 | will cost you. So go take advantage of that. All right, the drug the day today is Cyprofloxacin. |
| 0:40.5 | Brand name of this medication is Cypro. Syproxacin is a floral quinolone antibiotic. |
| 0:49.2 | Often we just say quinolone antibiotics just for shorter, less word vomit there, I guess, if you will. |
| 0:57.3 | It's an antibiotic used for bacterial infections. |
| 1:01.7 | And I would say primarily I see it used most for urologic type infections, urinary tract infections. |
| 1:09.8 | Prostititis is another example. But it can be used for other things as well. |
| 1:14.3 | Intri-abdominal infections, certain types of infectious diarrhea, for example, and on the rare occasion maybe for a respiratory tract infection as well. |
| 1:24.9 | And I'll talk about kind of that coverage a little bit of what |
| 1:28.1 | bacteria it covers in which ones it doesn't, and in particular in relation to respiratory |
| 1:33.7 | infections, why you don't see it too much for community-acquired pneumonia, for example. |
| 1:39.8 | All right, so mechanism of action, let's touch on that briefly. This medication inhibits bacterial DNA gyrase and topoisomerase. |
| 1:50.9 | So these are critical enzymes that are important for bacterial DNA replication and transcription. |
| 1:59.4 | Obviously, if those processes are interrupted or blocked, that can ultimately lead to cell death. |
| 2:07.6 | Getting into the bacterial coverage a little bit deeper here, so I alluded to Cyprophloxin not being the |
| 2:16.6 | greatest for community acquiredacquired pneumonia. |
| 2:19.7 | Let's compare that to say Levofloxicin, which is frequently or can be used more likely for that situation. |
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