Cilofungin (LY121019) is an antifungal agent that interferes with beta-glucan synthesis in the cells walls of fungi. The activity of this agent against 256 clinical isolates of yeasts was determined. It was found to be very active in vitro against Candida albicans (MIC for 90% of isolates [MIC90], less than or equal to 0.31 microgram/ml; minimal fungicidal concentration for 90% of isolates [MFC90], less than or equal to 0.31 micrograms/ml) and C. tropicalis (MIC90, less than or equal to 0.31 microgram/ml; MFC90, less than or equal to 0.31 microgram/ml) and moderately active against Torulopsis glabrata (MIC90 and MFC90, less than or equal to 20 micrograms/ml). All C. parapsilosis, Cryptococcus, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains were resistant. The activity of cilofungin was affected by medium and inoculum size. Antibiotic medium no. 3 was used as the standard medium. Isolates of C. albicans and C. tropicalis demonstrated a paradoxical effect in Sabouraud dextrose broth and yeast nitrogen base broth in that growth was partially inhibited at MICs equivalent to those in antibiotic medium no. 3, but growth continued, in many instances, throughout all concentrations tested. There was decreased activity of cilofungin with inocula greater than 10(5) CFU/ml. The temperature and duration of incubation did not affect its activity.
To determine whether methods suggested for detecting methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus apply equally to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus epidermidis, 135 S. epidermidis isolates were tested by the Vitek AMS gram-positive susceptibility card (Vitek Systems, Inc., Hazelwood, Mo.) and by modifications of agar screen, disk diffusion, and microdilution methods. Modifications included 24versus 48-h incubation, unsupplemented versus 2% NaCi-supplemented broth, and standard versus direct inoculum. At 24 h, the highest number of resistant strains, 59, was detected by oxacillin (1 ,Lg) disk diffusion. At 48 h, three additional strains were judged resistant. With one exception, results for oxacillin disk diffusion and agar screen were equivalent at 24 and 48 h. Vitek detected 50 resistant strains. Significantly fewer resistant strains were detected at 24 h by methicillin disk diffusion (5 ,g) and methicillin microdilution with 2% NaCl. For oxacillin microdilution, neither 2% NaCl supplementation nor the method of inoculum preparation significantly affected the results. Oxacillin microdilution with cationrather than non-cation-supplemented broth detected significantly fewer (n = 33) resistant strains at 24 h; 51 were resistant at 48 h. To detect methicillin-resistant S. epidermidis, a direct inoculum with either (i) 24-h oxacillin disk diffusion and reincubation of intermediate strains for an additional 24 h or (ii) 24-h oxacillin agar screen and reincubation of strains with no growth for a total of 48 h is recommended.
Reports of serious infections caused by Kluyvera spp. have been rare. A case ofKluyvera sp. mediastinitis and bacteremia in a man after open-heart surgery is described. The clinical significance of Kluyvera sp. isolates was debated in early descriptions of the organism. More recent reports, as well as the present case, suggest that the pathogenic potential of this organism is being increasingly recognized by clinicians and microbiologists.
A panel of Minitek sugar disks, consisting of trehalose, mannitol, xylose, and sucrose, was evaluated for its ability to identify blood culture isolates of Staphylococcus epidermidis (SE). Using a heavy suspension of organism in Mueller-Hinton broth, 50 microL was pipetted onto each disk in wells of a flat-bottomed microtiter tray. The tray was covered, incubated in a moist chamber in non-CO2 at 35 degrees C, and examined after 5 and 24 hours. A color change of yellow or orange was positive; no color change (red) was negative. Expected reactions for SE were as follows: negative trehalose, mannitol, and xylose; positive, sucrose. On evaluation of 227 coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS) at 5 and 24 hours, the panel had a sensitivity of 94 and 96%, specificity of 92 and 89%, predictive value of positive tests of 97 and 96%, and predictive value of negative tests of 84 and 87%. This panel offered an inexpensive and convenient method for differentiating SE from the other CNS in five hours.
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