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Macrobid  


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Nitrofurantoin
Systematic (IUPAC) name
(E)-1-[(5-nitro-2-furyl)methylideneamino]imidazolidine-2,4-dione
Identifiers
CAS number 67-20-9
ATC code J01XE01
PubChem 5353830
DrugBank APRD00191
ChemSpider 5036498
Chemical data
Formula C8H6N4O5 
Mol. mass 238.16
Pharmacokinetic data
Bioavailability 40%
Metabolism liver (75%)
Half life 20 minutes
Excretion urine and bile
Therapeutic considerations
Pregnancy cat.

B

Legal status

Rx, PoM

Routes oral, rectal[1]
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Nitrofurantoin is an antibiotic which is marketed under the following brand names; Furadantin, Macrobid, Macrodantin, Nitro Macro and Urantoin. It is usually used in treating urinary tract infection. Like many other drugs, it is often used against E Coli.

Contents

Use

Resistance to other antibiotics has led to increased interest in this agent.[2]

It is sometimes described as being appropriate to use in pregnant patients[3] (along with other agents such as sulfisoxazole or cephalexin).[4] This is in contrast to agents such as trimethoprim and ciprofloxacin which may not be appropriate for pregnant women.

Pharmacology

Organisms are said to be susceptible to nitrofurantoin if their Minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) is 32g/ml or less. The peak blood concentration of nitrofurantoin following an oral dose of nitrofurantoin 100 mg, is less than 1 g/ml and may be undetectable; tissue penetration is negligible; the drug is well concentrated in the urine: 75% of the dose is rapidly metabolised by the liver, but 25% of the dose is excreted in the urine unchanged, reliably achieving levels of 200 g/ml or more. For this reason, nitrofurantoin cannot be used to treat anything other than simple cystitis.

At the concentrations achieved in urine, nitrofurantoin is bacteriocidal.

Nitrofurantoin and the quinolone antibiotics are mutually antagonistic in vitro. It is not known whether this is of clinical significance, but the combination should be avoided.

Resistance to nitrofurantoin may be chromosomal or plasmid mediated and involves inhibition of nitrofuran reductase.[5] Acquired resistance in E. coli continues to be rare.

Nitrofurantoin and its metabolites are excreted mainly by the kidneys. In renal impairment, the concentration achieved in urine may be subtherapeutic. Nitrofurantoin should not be used in patients with a creatinine clearance of 60 ml/min or less.

Mechanism

The mechanism of action of nitrofurantoin is unique and complex. The drug works by damaging bacterial DNA, since its reduced form is highly reactive. This is made possible by the rapid reduction of nitrofurantoin inside the bacterial cell by flavoproteins (nitrofuran reductase) to multiple reactive intermediates that attack ribosomal proteins, DNA,[6] respiration, pyruvate metabolism and other macromolecules within the cell. It is not known which of the actions of nitrofurantoin is primarily responsible for its bacteriocidal acitivity.

Uses

The normal adult dose of nitrofurantoin is 50 to 100 mg four times daily for seven days. If a long-acting preparation (e.g., Macrobid) is used then the dose is 100 mg twice daily. The pediatric dose is 3 mg/kg/day in four divided doses. Nitrofurantoin should be taken with food, as this improves the absorption of the drug by 45%.

Nitrofurantoin is only clinically proven for use against E. coli or Staph. saprophyticus. It may also have in vitro activity against:

and is used in the treatment of infections caused by these organisms. Only a minority of Enterobacter species and Klebsiella species are sensitive to nitrofurantoin; nitrofurantoin has no activity against

Nitrofurantoin must never be used to treat pyelonephritis,[7] renal abscess, and pyeloempyema because of extremely poor tissue penetration and low blood levels. Urinary catheter infections may be treated with nitrofurantoin if there are no systemic features; the catheter must be changed after 48 hours of antibiotics and treatment is ineffective if the catheter is not replaced or removed.

Adverse effects

Nitrofurantoin can cause nausea and vomiting, fever, rash, hypersensitivity pneumonitis.[citation needed] It can also cause pulmonary fibrosis.[8] All these side effects are much more common in the elderly.

Patients should be informed that nitrofurantoin colours urine a dark orange-brown; this is completely harmless.

Neonates (babies up to the age of one month) have immature enzyme systems in their red blood cells (glutathione instability) and nitrofurantoin must therefore not be used because it can cause haemolytic anaemia. For the same reason, nitrofurantoin should not be given to pregnant women after 38 weeks of pregnancy, or who are about to give birth.

Nitrofurantoin is contraindicated in patients with decreased renal function (CrCl < 60ml/min) due to systemic accumulation and subtherapeutic levels reached in the urinary tract.

Use in food

Residues from the breakdown of nitrofuran veterinary antibiotics, including nitrofurantoin, have been found in chicken in Vietnam, China, Brazil, and Thailand.[9] The European Union banned the use of nitrofurans in food producing animals by classifying it in ANNEX IV (list of pharmacologically active substances for which no maximum residue limits can be fixed) of the Council Regulation 2377/90. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) of the United States has prohibited furaltadone since February 1985 and withdrew the approval for the other nitrofuran drugs (except some topical uses) in January 1992. The topical use of furazolidone and nitrofurazone was prohibited in 2002. Australia prohibited the use of nitrofurans in food production in 1992. Japan did not allocate MRLs for nitrofurans leading to the implementation of a "zero tolerance or no residue standard". In Thailand, the Ministry of Health issued in 2001 Proclamation No. 231 MRL of veterinary drug in food which did not allocate MRL for nitrofurans. The Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives had already prohibited importation and use of furazolidone and nitrofurazone in animal feed in 1999 which was extended to all nitrofurans in 2002. Several metabolites of nitrofurans, such as furazolidone, furaltadone and nitrofurazone cause cancer or genetic damage in rats.[9]

Precautions

Nitrofurantoin must be taken with food and can cause bleeding in the stomach, vomiting and other gastrointestinal disruptions if these warnings are not adhered to. Nitrofurantoin is contraindicated in patients with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency because of risk of extravascular hemolysis resulting in anemia.

Trade names

  • Furadantin (U.S., UK)
  • Macrobid (long acting preparation for twice daily dosing available in U.S., Canada, and UK)
  • Macrodantin (U.S., UK)
  • Furatin (inda medica INDIA)

References

  1. ^ Parrott, E. L.; Matheson Jr, L. E. (1977). "Rectal absorption of nitrofurantoin". Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences 66: 955958. doi:10.1002/jps.2600660713. 
  2. ^ Garau J (January 2008). "Other antimicrobials of interest in the era of extended-spectrum beta-lactamases: fosfomycin, nitrofurantoin and tigecycline". Clin. Microbiol. Infect. 14 Suppl 1: 198202. doi:10.1111/j.1469-0691.2007.01852.x. PMID 18154548. http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/resolve/openurl?genre=article&sid=nlm:pubmed&issn=1198-743X&date=2008&volume=14&issue=&spage=198. 
  3. ^ Lee M, Bozzo P, Einarson A, Koren G (June 2008). "Urinary tract infections in pregnancy". Can Fam Physician 54 (6): 8534. PMID 18556490. PMC 2426978. http://www.cfp.ca/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=18556490. 
  4. ^ "Urinary Tract Infections During Pregnancy - February 1, 2000 - American Academy of Family Physicians". http://www.aafp.org/afp/20000201/713.html. Retrieved 2009-08-04. 
  5. ^ McCalla DR, Kaiser C, Green MHL (1978). "Genetics of nitrofurazone resistance in Escherichia coli". J Bacteriol 133: 1016. 
  6. ^ Tu Y, McCalla DR (1975). "Effect of activated nitrofurans on DNA,". Biochem Biophys Acta 402: 14249. 
  7. ^ Richards WA, et al. (1955). "Nitrofurantoin: Clinical and laboratory studies in urinary tract infections". Arch Intern Med 96: 43750. 
  8. ^ Goemaere NN, Grijm K, van Hal PT, den Bakker MA (2008). "Nitrofurantoin-induced pulmonary fibrosis: a case report". J Med Case Reports 2: 169. doi:10.1186/1752-1947-2-169. PMID 18495029. PMC 2408600. http://www.jmedicalcasereports.com/content/2//169. 
  9. ^ a b FAO: Nitrofuran study

External links




Recent Macrobid Forums  View All  

Blood In Urine
I jus started takin macrobic...an I started like my menstraul wen I ahredi had it this month
Sunday, 8/23/2009 5:20:56 PM  1 Reply RSS Feed for these replies
Macrobid
want to know what this medicine is for.?
Sunday, 7/19/2009 9:08:22 PM  1 Reply RSS Feed for these replies
Severe Rigors, Flu Symptoms, Kidney, Lung Problems
after taking this drug became very sick with headache, severe rigors, flu like symptoms, pain that moved around organ to organ, pleuresy with severe lung pain, couldn't lie down for days. Tests revealed nothing. I am normally very healthy and this episode was put down to viral infection by my doctor. Has anyone else had these symptoms after taking Macrobid?
Tuesday, 5/26/2009 7:47:07 AM  Post a Reply
I Was Wondering
what is it? and wat does it do?
Wednesday, 11/26/2008 1:49:52 PM  Post a Reply
How To Take
I have problems with swollowing the pill can I open the capsule and put the granuales on something?
Monday, 8/18/2008 7:03:32 AM  Post a Reply
Generic Macrobid Side Effects
I have been taking a new generic Macrobid for about nine weeks, It is my only medication change. Nine weeks ago I stated having heart palpations, sometimes prolonged and disturbing. The new capsules are black and cream, not the old bright yellow and black. Printed on the capsule is a large, italicized E and the numbers 122. Has anyone experienced palpations with this drug?
Saturday, 2/23/2008 11:41:33 AM  3 Replies RSS Feed for these replies
Macrobid And Hcg
I recently found out I was pregnant. Just before I found out, I had a UTI and took Macrobid. I had a blood test at the Dr.'s office soon after I finished the prescription and my HCG levels were very high. Three days later, they were normal again, and ultrasound shows a heartbeat and everything in the right place--not ectopic. I am trying to come up with an explanation for the initial elevated HCG. My thyroid is fine. Could the Macrobid have caused the initial elevation?
Wednesday, 1/9/2008 12:52:26 PM  Post a Reply
Macrobid Reaction
Macrobid has horrible side effects, I experienced hives, burning in chest, throat, joint pain, fever, chills, nausea, sleeplessness,cough and head pain. I will never take this drug again.
Tuesday, 4/17/2007 10:17:37 AM  2 Replies RSS Feed for these replies




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This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GFDL (GNU Free Documentation License)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrofurantoin


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