One gram each of FCE 22101 and its acetoxymethyl ester (FCE 22891) were administered sequentially to six healthy volunteers. After intravenous administration Cmax was 167 mg/l, and the elimination half-life 0.8 h. Following oral administration Cmax was 6.9 mg/l and the elimination half-life 0.6 h. Penetration into inflammatory fluid was rapid, and the percentage penetration 86.1 and 60.9% following oral and intravenous dosing respectively. Urine recovery was greater after intravenous administration (31%) than after oral (11%).
A simple, reproducible method for determining the antibiotic susceptibility of chlamydial isolates is described. Minimum inhibitory and lethal concentrations (MICs and MLCs) were determined for tetracycline and erythromycin titrated against a recent clinical isolate of Chlamydia trachomatis in McCoy cell cultures. A fluorescent antibody stain was found to be more sensitive than giemsa staining, generally giving two-fold higher values for both MICs and MLCs.
Practices associated with continuation of breastfeeding beyond 10 days. Figures are numbers (percettages) ofmothers Breast fed for 6 10 days (n=27) Breast fed for >10 days (n 109)
The pharmacokinetics of two orally administered macrolides, spiramycin and erythromycin, were compared in six healthy male volunteers in a single dose cross-over study. Penetration of these antimicrobial agents into inflammatory fluid was studied. Spiramycin was administered in a 2 g dose and erythromycin in a 500 mg dose. Spiramycin (Tmax = 3.3 h) and erythromycin (Tmax = 1.2 h) were well absorbed reaching mean plasma Cmax of 3.1 mg/l and 2.1 mg/l, respectively. The relative bioavailability of erythromycin compared to spiramycin appeared to be three- to four-fold greater. The mean plasma elimination half-life was 3.8 h for spiramycin and 1.6 h for erythromycin. The percentage penetration of the antibiotics into inflammatory fluid was good, being 66% for spiramycin and 54% for erythromycin. Both antimicrobial agents attained inflammatory fluid Cmax of 0.7 mg/l by 4-4.8 h. Spiramycin persisted in the inflammatory fluid with a mean elimination half-life of 7.7 h compared to 2.2 h for erythromycin. Twenty-four hour urinary recovery of the administered dose of each antimicrobial agent was less than 5%.
An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay has been used to diagnose serologically the prevalence of Helicobacter pylori infection in Asian life-long vegans. There was no difference in the seropositivity between these individuals and a group of age- and sex-matched Asian meat-eaters, indicating the meat consumption is not a risk factor for H. pylori infection. However, both Asian groups had a higher prevalence of infection than age- and sex-matched Caucasian meat-eaters. Additionally, the Asian individuals had a wider range of specific IgG antibody concentrations than the Caucasians. This did not appear to be due to antigenic cross-reactivity between H. pylori and Campylobacter jejuni. The significance of these observations to the establishment of cut-off levels for the serodiagnosis of certain ethnic groups is discussed.
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