| Literature DB >> 3536278 |
P C Fuchs, R N Jones, A L Barry, L W Ayers, T L Gavan, E H Gerlach.
Abstract
For 45-60 days four geographically separate clinical laboratories tested routine clinical bacterial isolates for susceptibility to carumonam, aztreonam, BMY-28142, and ceftazidime by the broth microdilution method. All four drugs were highly active against Enterobacteriaceae, inhibiting greater than 96% of the 4887 strains tested at less than or equal to 8.0 microgram/ml. The minimal inhibitory concentration at which 50% of the isolates were inhibited for each drug was less than or equal to 0.125 micrograms/ml. Ceftazidime was the most active against nonenteric gram-negative bacilli (86% inhibited at less than or equal to 8.0 micrograms/ml), followed by BMY 28142 (82%), carumonam (75%), and aztreonam (68%). The two monobactams exhibited no activity against gram-positive cocci at the concentrations tested, whereas BMY-28142 had excellent activity against nonenterococcal streptococci and good activity against staphylococci.Entities:
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Year: 1986 PMID: 3536278 DOI: 10.1016/0732-8893(86)90041-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Microbiol Infect Dis ISSN: 0732-8893 Impact factor: 2.803