Antibiotics + Antimicrobials (Amoxicillin, Augmentin, Cephalexin, Cephradine, Aztreonam, Imipenem/Cilastatin, Meropenem, Vancomycin, Erythromycin, Gentamicin, Ciprofloxacin, TMP-SMX)
Body System: Multi-system (infectious disease fighters across the whole body)
Welcome to the Infection Front—where bacteria don’t “kind of” invade… they multiply, spread, and overwhelm organ systems if the wrong drug (or wrong timing) lets them.
In this volume, Lucy and the crew deploy across multiple body territories—lungs, skin, urinary tract, blood—using the most high-yield antibiotic classes in nursing. You’ll learn how each medication fights, what it’s typically used for, and the nursing safety checks that prevent complications like toxicity, resistance, and C. diff.
What this book covers (in story form):
Penicillins (Cell-wall breakers)
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Amoxicillin (Amoxil) — broad, common, and everywhere: how it disrupts bacterial walls and what allergy assessment must happen first.
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Amoxicillin/Clavulanic acid (Augmentin) — the “shield-breaker” combo: clavulanate blocks bacterial defenses so amoxicillin can work—especially useful when resistance is suspected.
Cephalosporins (Cell-wall breakers, ceph family)
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Cephalexin (Keflex)
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Cephradine (Anspor, Velosef)
These chapters make ceph meds easy: common infection uses, what to watch for with allergies, and why finishing the course matters.
Monobactam (Targeted gram-negative strike)
Carbapenems (Heavy-hitters for resistant infections)
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Imipenem (Primaxin) + Cilastatin — powerhouse coverage; cilastatin’s role is made memorable so it stops being “random extra drug.”
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Meropenem (Merrem IV) — another broad-spectrum heavy-hitter often used for serious hospital infections—built into a high-stakes “contain the outbreak” storyline.
Glycopeptide (Gram-positive shield-breaker)
Macrolide (Protein synthesis disruptor)
Aminoglycoside (Potent, but monitor closely)
Fluoroquinolone (DNA disruption)
Sulfonamide combo (Folate pathway shutdown)
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Trimethoprim/Sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim, Septra) — double-hit antimicrobial strategy: what it’s used for, hydration/skin reaction teaching, and key monitoring concepts.
You’ll learn through: