Flagyl

Metronidazole

Generic Name

Metronidazole

Mechanism

Metronidazole is a nitroimidazole that exerts its antibacterial and antiprotozoal effects by:
Intracellular reduction of the nitro group in anaerobic bacteria and protozoa.
• Formation of nitro‑radical intermediates that crosslink DNA strands, inhibit nucleic‑acid synthesis, and disrupt cell membranes.
• Induction of protein biosynthesis inhibition and generation of reactive oxygen species that kill organisms with low or no oxygen levels.

Pharmacokinetics

ParameterDetailsClinical Implication
Absorption95 % oral bioavailability; peak plasma concentration in 1–2 h.Fast onset; food does not significantly alter absorption.
DistributionVd 0.5–1.5 L/kg; penetrates CSF, bile, placenta, and adipose tissue.Useful for CNS and intra‑abdominal infections.
Protein Binding10‑15 %Minimal displacement interactions.
MetabolismHepatic microsomal (CYP2A6, CYP3A4).Potential drug interactions with phenobarbital, phenytoin, carbamazepine, and rifampin.
ExcretionRenal: 50‑70 % unchanged; biliary excretion also important.Renal dosing adjustment needed for CrCl < 50 mL/min.
Half‑life8–10 h (shorter in infants).Determines dosing interval; can be shortened by probenecid, phenobarbital, or phenytoin.

Indications

  • Anaerobic bacterial infections: odontogenic, intra‑abdominal, pelvic abscesses, peritonitis.
  • Protozoal infections: *Clostridioides difficile* colitis (often in combination), trichomoniasis, amoebiasis.
  • Bacterial vaginosis and *Trichomonas* vaginitis.
  • Mixed flora infections with *Escherichia coli*, *Streptococcus spp.*, *Bacteroides fragilis*, *Clostridium spp.*

Contraindications

  • Severe hepatic or cholestatic jaundice (especially in infants).
  • Dissulfiram‑like reaction with alcohol: patients must avoid any alcohol (even once per month) during therapy and for at least 48 h after completion.
  • Pregnancy: Category B; avoid use beyond 10 weeks unless treatment benefits outweigh risk.
  • Breastfeeding: excreted into milk; avoid or discontinue if mother is taking it.
  • CNS disorders: Anticipate potential neurotoxicity; use caution in patients with pre‑existing neuropathy or seizures.

Dosing

IndicationOralIntravenous (IV)
Anaerobic abscess, peritonitis5 – 10 mg/kg q6 h (max 500 mg q6 h)5 – 10 mg/kg q6 h (max 500 mg q6 h)
Bacterial vaginosis500 mg PO BID for 7 days
Trichomoniasis2 g PO single dose (or 500 mg BID x 7 days)10 mg/kg q6 h for 2 days
*C. difficile* colitis500 mg PO BID for 10–14 days10 mg/kg q6 h for 4–6 days
Amoebiasis500 mg PO BID for 10 days10 mg/kg q6 h for 4–6 days

Infants (≤12 mo): 7.5 mg/kg PO BID; 5 mg/kg IV q8 h.
Renal impairment (CrCl < 30 mL/min): extend dosing interval to q12 h (oral) or switch to 8 h interval IV.

Adverse Effects

CategoryExamples
CommonNausea, metallic taste, headache, dizziness, abdominal cramps, diarrhea, mouth candidiasis
Serious / RareNeurotoxicity (ataxia, peripheral neuropathy, seizures), hepatotoxicity (↑AST/ALT), hypersensitivity (rash, eosinophilia), interstitial nephritis, lactic acidosis

Important warning: Disulfiram‑like reactions—vomiting, flushing, chest pain—occur with alcohol ingestion at any dose.

Monitoring

  • Liver Function Tests (AST, ALT) if prolonged therapy (>2 weeks).
  • Renal Function (Creatinine, BUN) for dose adjustment in renal impairment.
  • Neurologic assessment (balance, peripheral sensation) if signs of neurotoxicity arise.
  • Blood glucose for diabetic patients on high‑dose regimens.

Clinical Pearls

1. Never give IV metronidazole with concurrent iron tablets; iron can increase neurotoxic risk.

2. Probenecid, phenobarbital, or phenytoin shorten the half‑life by enhancing renal excretion—use only when rapid clearance is required.

3. “Metronidazole‑days”: In patients who cannot tolerate full regimens, a shortened course (3 days) of 500 mg BID can still be effective for many vaginal/trichomonas infections.

4. Bowel injury: High cumulative doses (>6 g) increase risk of transaminitis; maintain a cumulative dose record.

5. Kids and alcohol: Even a single spirit drink during therapy may precipitate a severe reaction—educate patients thoroughly.

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• *This concise drug card is designed for quick reference by medical students and clinicians. Always confirm dosing and indications with institutional protocols and current literature.*

Medical & AI Content Disclaimers
Medical Disclaimer: Medical definitions are provided for educational purposes and should not replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

AI Content Disclaimer: Some definitions may be AI-generated and may contain inaccuracies. Always verify with authoritative medical references.

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