| Literature DB >> 405867 |
Abstract
Trephined disks of tissue (6 mm diameter) from fresh rabbit eyes were immersed overnight in solutions of radioactive carbon (14C)-dicloxacillin or gentamicin, then assayed by one of two methods: agar-diffusion bioassay, using filter-paper disks immersed in known concentrations of antibiotic as standards, or radioactive assay. The bioassay underestimated the concentrations of antibiotic in sclera and iris by 38 to 72%, and slightly overestimated those in the cornea. A corrected bioassay was calculated, based on the differences in fluid mass between tissue specimens and filter-paper disks; this value was within 20% of the radioactive assay in 18 of 24 experiments with dicloxacillin, and in 14 of 24 with gentamicin. There was evidence of pronounced binding of gentamicin to ocular tissues (iris greater than sclera greater than cornea); this appeared to be a saturable and reversible phenomenon. Less marked binding of dicloxacillin to iris and sclera was noted. The results indicated that, depending on the degree of accuracy required, the corrected trephine-disk agar-diffusion bioassay provides a reasonable estimate of the antibiotic content of ocular tissues.Entities:
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Year: 1977 PMID: 405867 DOI: 10.1016/0002-9394(77)90561-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Ophthalmol ISSN: 0002-9394 Impact factor: 5.258