Macrolides
(Redirected from Erythromycin)
| Drug monograph · NCLEX study reference | |
| Therapeutic class | Antibacterial |
|---|---|
| Pharmacologic class | Macrolide |
| Onset / peak / duration | Azithromycin has a long tissue half-life (short courses, once daily). |
| Half-life / level | Azithromycin about 68 hours; no routine level. |
| Routes | PO (oral), IV |
| High-alert (ISMP) | No |
| Black box warning | None |
| Antidote / reversal | Supportive care. |
| Pregnancy / lactation | Azithromycin commonly used when needed. |
Nursing pharmacology study reference (NCLEX-style monograph). Numeric values are standard teaching ranges for study and must be verified against current manufacturer labeling before clinical use. This is educational content, not prescribing guidance.
Macrolides — Antibacterial; Macrolide.
Identification
- Therapeutic class: Antibacterial.
- Pharmacologic class: Macrolide.
Pharmacology
- Mechanism of action: Bind the 50S ribosomal subunit to inhibit protein synthesis (bacteriostatic).
- Onset / peak / duration: Azithromycin has a long tissue half-life (short courses, once daily).
- Half-life / therapeutic level: Azithromycin about 68 hours; no routine level.
Clinical use
- Indications: Respiratory infections, atypical pneumonia, pertussis, sexually transmitted infections, H. pylori (clarithromycin).
- Usual dose, route, frequency: Azithromycin PO once daily (often a 5-day pack) or IV; erythromycin several times daily.
- Maximum dose / adjustments: Caution in hepatic impairment and with QT risk.
Safety
- Contraindications: Hypersensitivity, history of cholestatic jaundice with macrolides, certain QT-prolonging drug combinations.
- Black box warning: None.
- Interactions: QT-prolonging drugs, warfarin, statins (clarithromycin and erythromycin via CYP3A4, myopathy), digoxin; food affects some.
- Pregnancy / lactation: Azithromycin commonly used when needed.
- High-alert: No.
Adverse effects
- Common side effects: GI upset, diarrhea, abdominal cramping (erythromycin notably), taste changes.
- Serious effects to report: QT prolongation and arrhythmia, hepatotoxicity, C. difficile colitis.
- Antidote / reversal: Supportive care.
Nursing process
- Assessment before administration: Allergy, cardiac and QT history, interacting drugs, hepatic function.
- Interventions during therapy: Review QT-prolonging and CYP3A4 drugs.
- Monitor: Cardiac status if at risk, LFTs, infection resolution.
- Evaluation / expected outcome: Resolution of infection.
Patient teaching
- Patient teaching: Finish the course; report palpitations; take erythromycin with food for GI upset.
- Notify provider if: Palpitations, fainting, yellowing of skin, severe diarrhea.
- Administration tips: Azithromycin with or without food; separate from aluminum and magnesium antacids.