Course Content
Learn Veterinary Pharmacology with Lomash

Multiple drug therapy/ Combination of Antimicrobial Drug:

  • Combine use of two or more antimicrobial drugs is occasionally required to treat certain infection. It is useful in following situations:
  • To broaden the spectrum of antibacterial activity
  • To treat mixed or obscure bacterial infections in which organism are not susceptible to single antimicrobial drug.
  • To achieve synergistic antimicrobial activity against some resistant strains of bacteria.
  • To prevent emergence of resistant strains of bacteria
  • To minimize the toxicity of antimicrobial drug.

Disadvantages of multiple drug therapy:

  • It is not useful when drugs combined in fixed dosage mixture or when two drugs interfere with each other’s action.
  • Increases chances of super infection
  • Facilitate the emergence of bacterial resistance when inadequate doses of non-synergistic drug are used.
  • Increase cost of therapy

 

Guidelines for Combination of Antimicrobial Drug:

  • Selection of combination of antimicrobial drug should be based on mechanism of action which are different and spectra of activity those are complimentary.
  • As general rule, combination of two bacteriostatic drug results in additive effect whereas combination of two bactericidal drugs often results in synergistic effect.
  • Some exceptions are present. Ex: combination of bactericidal streptomycin and bacteriostatic tetracycline produce synergistic action in the treatment of brucellosis.
  • Type of interaction between two antimicrobial drugs in combination may be evaluated from plot of activity in isobologram.
  • It determines whether the MIC of one drug is reduced (synergism), unchanged (additive) or increased (antagonism) in presence of another drug.
  • In isobologram, synergism is shown by concave curve, addition by straight line & antagonism by convex curve.
  • Bactericidal + Bactericidal = Synergistic effect

Bacteriostatic + Bacteriostatic = Additive effect

Bactericidal + Bacteriostatic = Antagonistic effect

 

No description available.

Examples:

 

Synergism:

  • Combination of penicillin G and streptomycin produce synergistic lethal effect on enterococci because penicillin G enhances penetration of aminoglycoside into bacterial cell by causing bacterial cell wall damage.

 

Antagonism:

  • Combination of tetracyclines and penicillin produces reduced antibacterial activity as tetracyclines inhibit growth and multiplication of bacteria those are required for rapid cell wall damaging effect produced by β-lactam antibiotics.

 

Prophylactic use of Antimicrobial Agent:

  • To prevent infections in dirty contaminated wounds
  • To prevent infection after surgical operations
  • To prevent post-partum infections in dams after normal parturition
  • To prevent secondary bacterial invasion in viral infection
  • To prevent infection in disease outbreak/epidemic
  • To prevent infection in endemic areas with high transmission rate
Scroll to Top