Use of anti-bacterial drugs by special groups.

In this silent fight with bacteria, antibacterial drugs are like swords in our hands. However, when specific populations face infection requiring the use of anti-bacterial drugs, they cannot be treated with the same care and care as ordinary people, and every step has to be taken with caution, as a slight failure may have unintended consequences.

Looking at the elderly, the years of grinding make their physical functioning slow down, especially in the liver and kidneys, making the “travel” of antibacterials in the body variable. Common drugs such as Quintacolin, when used by young people at regular doses, are like unguided ships, slowly hovering in the body, difficult to successfully metabolize and excretion, and are thus prone to accumulation of organs such as kidneys, ears and so forth, with a hidden effect on hearing and kidney function. Thus, before an elderly patient uses a drug, a doctor must use a professional medical test, like a sophisticated detector, to accurately assess the liver and kidney function, which usually reduces the dose of the drug as appropriate, carefully prolongs the interval of the drug and ensures that the drug is both resistant to infection and does not cause physical disruption. Moreover, the immune capacity of older persons resembles a veil, with a slight degree of vulnerability to bacteria, and symptoms of infection are often “covered” and not as hot and coughing as young people. Family members must be more careful in their daytimes when they realize that the elderly are suffering from an arrhythmia like a frosting eggplant, that their appetite has been reduced as if they had lost their appetite, or that their breathing has been short, even if it is a minor change, and that it is important to take the elderly to the hospital at once and to choose the appropriate antibacterial drugs in strict compliance with medical advice.

And looking at the children, they’re the hope of every family, but in the use of anti-bacterial drugs, the details can never be taken lightly. Children are in a period of booming growth, and their organs are young and sensitive, and may be “injured” if they are not careful. In the case of amino-sugar-type drugs, their ear, kidney toxicity is evident, as if they were hidden “dears”, and children should be avoided as much as possible; tetracyclic drugs are more like a “grave pen”, which leaves an ugly yellow stain on the teeth of children under 8 years of age and hinders their healthy development; and quinone is like a “treadstone” on the way to growth, which is strictly prohibited for use by minors under 18 years of age, as it may affect the development of their bones. In addition, a child’s dose of medication must be as precise as a work of art, measured on the basis of weight and age, rather than simply a rough “minus half adults”. In the case of Amosilin, children of different ages, with very different sizes and numbers of granules, parents can easily step into the wrong zone and interfere with the child ‘ s recovery, and may endanger the child ‘ s growth. Moreover, it often gives parents headaches, but even so, it is important not to make it easy for them to crush capsules and gnaw intestines, which may seem to be a small move, but as a decomposition of precision devices, it would make the efficacy of the drug less effective and even cause adverse reactions. It is important to communicate with the doctor in a timely manner, in the form of sweet, easy-to-swallow oral fluids and so on, so that it is no longer difficult for the child to take medication.

The situation of pregnant mothers is even more specific, with new life in the womb, and the choice of anti-bacterial drugs, like a wire, has to be done with great care. During the first three months of pregnancy, the golden period during which the organs of the fetus were divided, drugs such as tetracyclics and quinone, which, once passed through the placenta barrier, could have disastrous effects on the development of the foetus, leading to foetal malformations, which must be included in the ban list; at the end of pregnancy, sulfamic antibacterials were transformed into potential “black hands” that caused yellow bellies in the newborns, which also had to be avoided. Breast-feeding mothers are also not easy, and the antibacterial drugs they take are transmitted to the baby through the “secret passage” of milk. If, for example, the use of drugs such as mitazole is required for reasons such as breast disease, the breast-feeding must be severely suspended during the time of the drug use, and the general absence of the drug 2 to 3 days later the concentration of the drug in the milk will be reduced significantly, as if the cloud had dispersed, and the baby will be able to benefit safely from the “ration”.

There are also patients with incomplete liver and kidneys whose bodies are like a non-functioning machine whose ability to deal with anti-bacterial drugs is severely compromised. Hepatic loss patients, the choice of the drug and the dose adjustment seem to be a complex chess game, requiring a comprehensive consideration of the disruption of the liver function to the process in the drug and the risk of toxic reactions from the drug and its metabolites. Drugs that are largely liver-cleaned and are not clearly toxic should be used in a nervously tight and slow-down if necessary, while those that are primarily liver-cleaned or metabolized and can lead to toxic effects should be avoided with determination as dangerous “mined areas”. In cases where the kidney function is reduced, the use of the drug must be actively bypassed, and if it is necessary, the programme should be fine-tuned to the specific extent of the reduction in the kidney function, while keeping an eye on it and closely monitoring the changes in the kidney function, like the guard lighthouse, to ensure its safety.

The health of special groups of people is at the root of the well-being of thousands of families, and anti-bacterial drugs are properly used, which is the warm sun that disperses the disease; if used wrongly, it may be the shadows of the whole family. Patients and their families must always follow their own health or that of their families, and medical treatment must be administered in such a way as to ensure that anti-bacterial drugs are not “disturbed” on particular populations, so that the path to proper use of healthy medicines can be set in motion in such a way that each and every one of them can enjoy a better life with the security of the drug.