| Literature DB >> 1952852 |
R H Eng1, F T Padberg, S M Smith, E N Tan, C E Cherubin.
Abstract
Antimicrobial agents are most often tested against bacteria in the log phase of multiplication to produce the maximum bactericidal effect. In an infection, bacteria may multiply less optimally. We examined the effects of several classes of antimicrobial agents to determine their actions on gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria during nongrowing and slowly growing phases. Only ciprofloxacin and ofloxacin exhibited bactericidal activity against nongrowing gram-negative bacteria, and no antibiotics were bactericidal (3-order-of-magnitude killing) against Staphylococcus aureus. For the very slowly growing gram-negative bacteria studied, gentamicin (an aminoglycoside), imipenem (a carbapenem), meropenem (a carbapenem), ciprofloxacin (a fluoroquinolone), and ofloxacin (a fluoroquinolone) exhibited up to 5.7 orders of magnitude more killing than piperacillin or cefotaxime. This is in contrast to optimally growing bacteria, in which a wide variety of antibiotic classes produced 99.9% killing. For the gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria we examined, antibiotic killing was greatly dependent on the growth rate. The clinical implications of slow killing by chemotherapeutic agents for established bacterial infections and infections involving foreign bodies are unknown.Entities:
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Year: 1991 PMID: 1952852 PMCID: PMC245275 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.35.9.1824
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antimicrob Agents Chemother ISSN: 0066-4804 Impact factor: 5.191