Showing posts with label why we use the combination fo clindamicine with cefotoxine in peritonitis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label why we use the combination fo clindamicine with cefotoxine in peritonitis. Show all posts

Thursday, January 31, 2013


Clinical evaluation of cefotaxime versus gentamicin plus clindamycin in the treatment of polymicrobial peritonitis.

Abstract

One hundred fifty-one patients with presumed aerobic-anaerobic mixed peritoneal infections were treated in a prospective, randomized trial with either cefotaxime alone (76) or the combination of gentamicin-clindamycin (75). Primary and complicating foci of sepsis were cultured for both aerobic and anaerobic pathogen identification and antibiotic susceptibility. In vitro aerobic disk sensitivities (114 isolates) to cefotaxime were 82% and to gentamicin, 88%; anaerobic agar-diffusion sensitivities (227 isolates) to cefotaxime were 87% and to clindamycin, 98%. Only enterococci and Pseudomonas sp were consistently resistant to cefotaxime. Infection was eliminated in 82% of those treated with cefotaxime and in 87% of those treated with the gentamicin-clindamycin combination, yet sepsis recurred in 11% of those treated with cefotaxime and in 13% for those given gentamicin-clindamycin. Five patients (7%) demonstrated nephrotoxicity for gentamicin. (Serum creatinine increased greater than 1.5 mg/100 ml over pretreatment levels.) Otherwise, incidence and severity of adverse reactions were identical for the two groups and consisted primarily of phlebitis and diarrhea. One patient in each treatment group died of uncontrolled sepsis. Although results suggested a laboratory superiority of gentamicin-clindamycin, there was a clinical equality in therapeutic benefit and a greater safety following the use of cefotaxime alone.

Authors

Source

Clinical therapeutics 5 Suppl A: 1982 pg 1-9

MeSH

Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Bacterial Infections
Cefotaxime
Clindamycin
Drug Therapy, Combination
Female
Gentamicins
Humans
Male
Microbial Sensitivity Tests
Middle Aged
Peritonitis

Pub Type(s)

Clinical Trial
Comparative Study
Journal Article
Randomized Controlled Trial

Language

eng

PubMed ID

6293712