## Correct Answer: B. La d Lomefloxacin Lomefloxacin is contraindicated in hepatic impairment and should be avoided in liver disease because it undergoes significant hepatic metabolism and is excreted primarily through the biliary system. Unlike other fluoroquinolones, lomefloxacin accumulates in patients with compromised liver function, leading to increased risk of toxicity and adverse effects. The drug's clearance is markedly reduced in hepatic disease, necessitating dose reduction or avoidance altogether. In Indian clinical practice, when treating infections in cirrhotic or hepatically impaired patients, lomefloxacin is explicitly contraindicated per KD Tripathi and standard antimicrobial guidelines. The hepatic metabolism makes it unsuitable for patients with Child-Pugh grade B or C cirrhosis. This is a critical safety consideration in India where viral hepatitis and alcoholic liver disease are common comorbidities in hospitalized patients requiring fluoroquinolone therapy. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Pefloxacin** — Pefloxacin is safe in liver disease and does not require dose adjustment. It undergoes minimal hepatic metabolism and is primarily renally excreted, making it suitable for hepatically impaired patients. This is a commonly used fluoroquinolone in India for respiratory and urinary tract infections even in patients with liver disease. **C. Levofloxacin** — Levofloxacin is safe in hepatic impairment and does not require dose modification in liver disease. It is primarily renally eliminated with minimal hepatic metabolism, making it one of the preferred fluoroquinolones in patients with cirrhosis or hepatic dysfunction. Widely used in Indian clinical practice for such patients. **D. Ofloxacin** — Ofloxacin is safe in liver disease and requires no dose adjustment. It is predominantly renally excreted with minimal hepatic involvement, making it suitable for hepatically impaired patients. This is a commonly prescribed fluoroquinolone in India for various infections in patients with compromised liver function. ## High-Yield Facts - **Lomefloxacin** is contraindicated in liver disease due to significant hepatic metabolism and biliary excretion. - **Pefloxacin, levofloxacin, and ofloxacin** are safe in hepatic impairment as they undergo minimal hepatic metabolism and are primarily renally excreted. - Fluoroquinolones with **renal excretion** (>70%) are preferred in patients with cirrhosis or hepatic dysfunction. - **Hepatic metabolism** of lomefloxacin leads to drug accumulation and increased toxicity risk in liver disease. - In Indian patients with **viral hepatitis or alcoholic cirrhosis**, lomefloxacin must be avoided; alternatives include levofloxacin or ofloxacin. ## Mnemonics **Fluoroquinolones SAFE in Liver Disease** **POLO** — **P**efloxacin, **O**floxacin, **L**evofloxacin, **O**ther renally excreted agents. Remember: these are SAFE because they bypass the liver. **Lomefloxacin Hepatic Metabolism** **LOME = Liver Oxidation Metabolism Extensive** — Lomefloxacin undergoes extensive hepatic metabolism, making it the odd one out among fluoroquinolones. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs lomefloxacin with other fluoroquinolones to test whether students know the pharmacokinetic differences between renal and hepatic elimination routes. The trap is assuming all fluoroquinolones are equally safe in liver disease when in fact lomefloxacin's biliary excretion makes it uniquely problematic. ## Clinical Pearl In an Indian hospital setting, when a cirrhotic patient with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis or respiratory infection requires fluoroquinolone therapy, lomefloxacin must be explicitly avoided; levofloxacin or ofloxacin are the preferred choices as they do not accumulate in hepatic dysfunction and maintain predictable pharmacokinetics. _Reference: KD Tripathi Pharmacology Ch. 48 (Fluoroquinolones); Harrison Principles of Internal Medicine Ch. 137 (Antimicrobial Therapy)_
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