Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.6.1.2 (alanine aminotransferase)
26,722 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Broadcillin 'Banyu', which contains an equal amount of ampicillin and oxacillin was given intravenously to children with acute bacterial infections and the following results were obtained. 1. Patients were 55 children with the following bacterial infections; respiratory tract infections (8 cases), pneumonia (34), sepsis (1), meningitis (1), cutaneous and subcutaneous suppurative inflammation (5), osteomyelitis (1), urinary tract infection (2), enteritis (1), and chemoprophylaxis (2). They ranged in age from newborns to 8 year old, but most of them were infants. In the majority of the patients, broadcillin 'Banyu' was administered 50 approximately 150 mg/day in three to four equally divided doses by one shot-injection or by a continuous drip infusion for a period of 2 approximately 10 days. The overall efficacy rate was 88.7% in 53 cases after two cases of chemoprophylaxis were excluded, i.e., excellent in 28, good in 19 and failure in 6: excellent in 4 and good in 4 in 8 cases of respiratory tract infections; excellent in 20, good in 11 and failure in 3 in 34 cases of pneumonia (an efficacy rate 91.2%); failure in sepsis and meningitis: excellent in 2 and good in 3 in 5 cases of cutaneous and subcutaneous suppurative inflammation; excellent in osteomyelitis; excellent in 1 and good in 1 of 2 cases of urinary tract infection; failure in enteritis. 2. Adverse reactions were noted on 10 occasions in 9 cases (16.4%), including 1 case of skin eruption, 1 case of eosinophilia, 5 cases of slight elevation of GOT, 1 case of slight elevation of GPT and 2 cases of slight elevation of BUN. 3. Based on the above results, it was concluded that clinical effect of broadcillin 'Banyu' by an intravenous administration is comparable to its intramuscular route and that safety of intravenous usage seems to be verified as long as the above described dosage is followed.
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation of intravenous administration of ampicillin-oxacillin (Broadcillin 'Banyu') in bacterial infections in children (author's transl)]. 66 Sep 30

Laboratory and clinical studies on cefprozil (CFPZ, BMY-28100), a new cephem antibiotic, were carried out in the field of pediatrics. The results obtained are summarized as follows: 1. Serum concentrations, urinary concentrations and urinary recovery rates of CFPZ were determined upon oral administration of CFPZ after meal at doses of 4 mg/kg granules in a case, 7.5 mg/kg granules in 2 cases and 15 mg/kg granules in one. Peak serum levels of CFPZ were obtained at an hour in 3 cases and at 2 hours in 1 case after administration of the drug with a range of 2.7-8.6 micrograms/ml with half-lives of 0.69-0.95 hours. Urinary recovery rates in the first 6 hours after administration ranged from 59.4-71.3%. 2. MICs of CFPZ against 36 clinical isolates (Staphylococcus aureus 4 strains, Streptococcus pneumoniae 5, Streptococcus pyogenes 5, Escherichia coli 5, Haemophilus influenzae 12, Haemophilus parainfluenzae 4, and Branhamella catarrhalis 1) were compared with those of cefaclor (CCL) and ampicillin (ABPC). The antibacterial activity of CFPZ was superior to those of CCL against Gram-positive cocci, and to those of ABPC against E. coli, and was equal to those of CCL and inferior to those of ABPC against H. influenzae. 3. Thirty-seven pediatric patients with acute infectious diseases (pharyngitis/tonsillitis 17, bronchitis 7, pneumonia 3, skin and soft tissue infection 2, and urinary tract infection 8) were treated with CFPZ at daily doses of 10-47 mg/kg t.i.d. as a rule. The efficacy rates were 100% clinically and 56% bacteriologically. 4. Side effects or abnormal laboratory test values were not observed except for an increased platelet count in 1 case and elevated GOT, GPT values in 2 cases.
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PMID:[Laboratory and clinical studies on cefprozil in the field of pediatrics]. 149 37

In 21 low birth weight infants with two regimens of antibiotic therapy during the first 3 days of life possible hepatotoxic side effects were studied 8 days after the last administration of the tested drugs. Fourteen of the infants were treated with ampicillin/gentamicin and 7 received cefotaxime/gentamicin. The serum concentrations of total bile acids, the activities of transaminases in serum and the cumulative 15N excretion in urine after administration of 3 mg of 15N-labeled methacetin/kg of body weight were used as markers of hepatotoxic side effects. Neither the concentrations of total bile acids (22.6 +/- 12.1 and 19.4 +/- 10.8 mM, respectively) nor the activities of transaminases (alanine aminotransferase, 0.27 +/- 0.06 vs. 0.30 +/- 0.09 mumol/second/liter; aspartate aminotransferase, 0.46 +/- 0.11 vs. 0.49 +/- 0.10 mumol/second/liter) were different between the two groups. In contrast the cumulative 15N excretion in urine was significantly lower in the group treated with cefotaxime/gentamicin than in the group treated with ampicillin/gentamicin (17.2 +/- 6.4 vs. 33.0 +/- 5.1% of intake; P less than 0.01) and also lower than the reported age-related reference values. On the 28th day of life no differences could be found between the cumulative 15N excretion in the urine of the infants treated with cefotaxime/gentamicin and the reported age-related reference values of this test. The results indicate a limited capacity of the monooxygenase system of the liver of low birth weight infants during the first weeks of life and a specific reversible influence of cefotaxime on this hepatocellular system. Further investigations are required to evaluate the clinical relevance of this drug-specific inhibition of the hepatic monooxygenase pathway.
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PMID:Effects of two antibiotics on hepatic function in low birth weight infants: ampicillin vs. cefotaxime. 194 75

Pharmacokinetics and clinical effects were studied in a combination therapy with aztreonam (AZT) and ampicillin (ABPC) in neonates and premature infants. The results obtained are summarized as follows. 1. Pharmacokinetics (1) Average serum concentrations at 30 minutes after one-shot intravenous injection of AZT 20 mg/kg and ABPC 25 mg/kg to a 4-7 days age-group of neonates were 41.3 (AZT) and 30.5 (ABPC) micrograms/ml, respectively. They gradually decreased to 14.7 and 2.7 micrograms/ml at 6 hours after the administration, but the concentration of AZT was always higher than that of ABPC. (2) Serum half-lives (T1/2) in the 4-7 days age-group were 3.61 hours for AZT and 1.42 hours for ABPC, thus T1/2 of AZT was longer. However, T1/2 of AZT was scarcely affected in the concomitant administration of ABPC. (3) Urinary excretion of AZT in the concomitant administration to the 4-7 days age-group was 52.7%, which was the same or a little higher comparing to that in AZT alone administration. 2. Clinical studies (1) AZT and ABPC were concomitantly administered to 160 cases and 133 cases were evaluated for efficacy. Pathogenic organisms were identified in 29 cases (Group A) and the efficacy rate was 86.2% (25/29). The number of cases in which pathogenic organisms were not identified (Group B) was 50 and in this group, the efficacy rate was excellent, 94.0% (47/50). AZT and ABPC were concomitantly administered to 54 cases for prophylaxis and in all the cases the administrations showed prophylactic effect. (2) Bacterial changes were confirmed in 21 of the 29 cases in which pathogenic organisms were identified initially and all of these 21 cases showed bacterial eradication, i.e., the bacterial eradication rate in the treatment was 100%. (3) There were 2 cases in which side-effects were observed among the analyzed 152 cases (1.3%). The side effects found were 1 case each of diarrhea and eruption. Abnormal laboratory values were found in 23 cases (15.9%), i.e., eosinophilia (9 cases), platelet-increase (4), elevation of GOT (4), elevation of GOT and GPT (3) and others (3). From the above pharmacokinetics and clinical results, the combination therapy of AZT and ABPC is considered to be one of the useful empiric antibiotic-therapies when pathogenic organisms are unknown in the infections of neonates and premature infants.
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PMID:[Pharmacokinetics and clinical studies on aztreonam in neonates and premature infants (the second report). Study on effectiveness and safety in combination therapy using aztreonam and ampicillin. A study of aztreonam in the Perinatal Co-research Group]. 219 69

During 8 months from October 1986 to May 1987, the clinical efficacy of sulbactam/ampicillin (SBT/ABPC) was evaluated in 63 pediatric inpatients with various infections. Clinical efficacies were evaluable in 58 patients among them (consisting of 2 patients with sepsis, 3 with tonsillitis, 12 with bronchitis, 6 with bronchopneumonia, 24 with pneumonia, 1 with phlegmon, 2 with lymphadenitis, 1 with impetigo and 7 with urinary tract infection) and were excellent in 40 patients and good in 17 with an overall efficacy rate of 98.3%. Bacteriological efficacies were assessed in 25 patients and 27 strains of organisms (consisting of 3 strains of Staphylococcus aureus, 2 Streptococcus pneumoniae, 1 Streptococcus pyogenes, 2 beta-Streptococcus, 1 Gram-positive cocci, 5 Escherichia coli, 1 Enterobacter aerogenes, 7 Haemophilus influenzae, 2 Haemophilus parainfluenzae, 1 Branhamella catarrhalis, 1 Proteus mirabilis and 1 Salmonella subgenus I). Bacteriological eradication rates were 88.9% for Gram-positive organisms, 66.7% for Gram-negative organisms and 74.1% overall. No superinfection was observed in any of patients treated. Side effects and clinical laboratory parameter abnormalities observed consisted of diarrhea in 7 (11.1%) of the 63 patients, eosinophilia in 2 (3.3%) of 61 tested, thrombocytosis in 3 (5.5%) of 55, elevation of direct bilirubin in 1 (3.3%) of 30, elevation of total bilirubin in 1 (3.1%) of 32, elevation of GOT in 4 (6.8%) of 59 and elevation of GPT in 1 (1.7%) of 59 patients tested. As an effect on the hemostatic mechanism of this drug, PIVKA II was detected in 1 patient (4.2%) of 24 tested, but findings of other coagulation tests were normal and none of patients showed bleeding tendency or inhibition of platelet aggregation. From the above results, it appears that SBT/ABPC is an efficacious and safe drug in the treatment of bacterial infections of pediatric patients.
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PMID:[Clinical studies on sulbactam/ampicillin in the field of pediatrics]. 266 49

Pharmacokinetic and clinical studies on sulbactam/ampicillin (SBT/ABPC) were carried out in the field of pediatrics. 1. Absorption and excretion Serum levels and urinary excretion of SBT/ABPC were studied in 4 children with ages 6 to 8 years. The mean serum concentration of SBT at 15 minutes following a single intravenous injection of 30 mg/kg of SBT/ABPC was 27.4 +/- 2.2 micrograms/ml and that of ABPC was 42.8 +/- 3.9 micrograms/ml, and their concentrations declined with mean half-lives of 1.06 +/- 0.15 hours and 0.84 +/- 0.05 hour, respectively, and at 6 hours were 0.3 +/- 0.2 microgram/ml and 0.2 +/- 0.1 microgram/ml on the average, respectively. The urinary recovery rates of SBT and ABPC at 6 hours after the injection were 59.0 +/- 22.4% and 58.4 +/- 25.3% on the average, respectively. 2. Clinical study SBT/ABPC was used for the treatment of a total of 36 pediatric patients with ages ranging 2 months to 11 years and it's clinical effectiveness, bacteriological efficacy and adverse effects were evaluated. Clinical efficacies in 5 patients with acute purulent tonsillitis, 26 with acute pneumonia and 1 with acute pyelonephritis were judged to be excellent in 27 cases and good in 5 cases with an overall efficacy ratio of 100.0%. Clinical efficacies in 6 patients whose infections were caused by beta-lactamase producing strains were judged to be excellent in all cases. Bacteriological efficacies of SBT/ABPC were assessed on 1 strain of Staphylococcus aureus (beta-lactamase producing strain), 2 strains of Streptococcus pneumoniae, 16 strains of Haemophilus influenzae (5 beta-lactamase producing strains and 11 non-beta-lactamase producing strains), 1 non-beta-lactamase strain of Haemophilus parainfluenzae and 2 strains of Escherichia coli (non-beta-lactamase producing strains). All strains except 1 strain of H. influenzae (beta-lactamase producing strain) which decreased in number were eradicated with a bacteriological eradication rate of 95.5%. Only 1 patient complained of diarrhea which was suspected to be related to the drug. No other side effect was reported. Elevations of GOT and GPT were observed in only 1 patient. The above results suggested that SBT/ABPC was a useful drug with preferable safety profile in the treatment for pediatric patients with infectious disease caused by beta-lactamase producing strains as well as those by non-beta-lactamase producing strains.
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PMID:[Studies on sulbactam/ampicillin in the field of pediatrics]. 266 50

Intravenous administration of sulbactam/ampicillin (SBT/ABPC) was evaluated in pediatric patients. The serum half-lives of both ABPC and SBT were approximately 1 hour following the intravenous injection or intravenous drip infusion of 20-35 mg/kg, and 30-50% of ABPC and 30-70% of SBT were recovered in the urine 6 hours. Cerebrospinal fluid concentrations of ABPC and SBT were 0.76 and 0.68 micrograms/ml, respectively, at 1 hour after intravenous drip infusion of the 58 mg/kg, and concentration ratios of the drugs in cerebrospinal fluid/serum were 6.39 and 5.71%, respectively. Thirty-four pediatric patients were treated with intravenous drip infusion of SBT/ABPC in doses ranging from 54 to 150 mg/kg divided into 3 times a day. The rate of clinical efficacy was 93.5% and the bacterial elimination rate was 92.3%. The synergistic activity of sulbactam with ampicillin was demonstrated against beta-lactamase-producing Staphylococcus aureus and Haemophilus influenzae isolated from patients in the present study. The side effects of SBT/ABPC were observed in 6 patients (5 diarrheas; 1 diarrhea with vomiting) out of 34 patients administered. Eosinophilia (2 patients) and a slight elevation of GOT (1 patient), GPT and LDH (1 patient) were observed. The tolerance to the therapy, however, was good.
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PMID:[Clinical and pharmacokinetic studies on intravenous administration of sulbactam/ampicillin in pediatrics]. 274 46

Clinical trials were carried out on the use of sulbactam/ampicillin (SBT/ABPC) (combination rate of 1:2) in pediatric infections. Results were as follows: 1. The mean half-lives of SBT and ABPC in the serum following intravenous injection of SBT/ABPC were about 1.05 and 0.90 hours, respectively. 2. The mean urinary excretions of SBT and ABPC in 6 hours after intravenous injection of SBT/ABPC were 71.2% and 62.2%, respectively. 3. SBT/ABPC was administered to 23 pediatric patients with various infections: 17 patients with pneumonia, 3 with tonsillitis, 2 with urinary tract infection and 1 with cervical lymphadenitis. The overall efficacy rate was 95.7%. In particular, 2 urinary tract infections caused by highly beta-lactamase producing Escherichia coli were improved by the treatment with SBT/ABPC. 4. No adverse reactions were observed except 2 cases of mild diarrhea. Abnormal laboratory test values included thrombocytosis in 4 and slight elevation of GOT and GPT in 1, but they were transient.
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PMID:[Pharmacokinetic, bacteriological and clinical studies on sulbactam/ampicillin in pediatric field]. 274 47

The new antibiotic, sulbactam/ampicillin (SBT/ABPC) was administered to 25 children. The results obtained are summarized as follows. 1. In 5 cases of children administered with SBT/ABPC (30 mg/kg) by intravenous drip infusion for 30 minutes, the mean values of T 1/2 (beta) were 0.94 hour (SBT) and 0.86 hour (ABPC) and the mean 6.5 hour urinary excretion rates were 64.2% and 42.9%, respectively. 2. The antibiotic was administered to a total of 25 patients with bronchopneumonia, pneumonia, bronchitis, cervical lymphadenitis, tonsillitis, streptococcal infection, urinary tract infection, felon, periappendicular abscess, sepsis or purulent meningitis. Response to the treatment were excellent in 17 cases, good in 7, fair in 1, and poor in none. The efficacy rate was 96%. From our results, this drug appears to be particularly effective against bronchopneumonia, bronchitis and urinary tract infection. 3. Eruption occurred in 1 of 25 patients and elevation of eosinophil, GOT/GPT, platelet in 3 and descent of WBC in 1 were observed, but these were transient. These results showed that SBT/ABPC is a drug which can be safely used in the pediatric field as well as for adults.
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PMID:[Pharmacokinetic and clinical studies on sulbactam/ampicillin in the pediatric field]. 274 48

Laboratory and clinical studies of sulbactam/ampicillin (SBT/ABPC) in children have been carried out, and the following results were obtained. 1. Antibacterial effect MICs of SBT/ABPC were only one-tube less than or similar to those of ABPC against susceptible organisms. Against ABPC-resistant organisms at the inoculum size of 10(8) cells/ml however, SBT/ABPC was superior to ABPC when evaluated in terms of their MIC values. When MICs of SBT/ABPC were compared to those of ABPC against organisms with high beta-lactamase producing activities, it was found that many of ABPC-resistant organisms were much susceptible to SBT/ABPC. 2. Absorption and urinary excretion In 2 cases to which 50 mg/kg and 20 mg/kg SBT/ABPC were respectively given over 30 minutes by drip infusion, peak serum levels were obtained at the end of the drip infusion with peak levels of SBT of 45.5 micrograms/ml, 12.5 micrograms/ml, respectively and those of ABPC of 83.0 micrograms/ml, 22.9 micrograms/ml, respectively. The half-lives of SBT and ABPC were 0.94 hour and 0.98 hour, respectively. The mean urinary excretion rates in the first 6 hours after the end of administration were 84.4% for SBT and 63.1% for ABPC. 3. Clinical results Clinical efficacies were evaluated in 24 cases including 9 cases of pneumonia, 2 cases of upper respiratory infection, 7 cases of urinary tract infection and 1 case each of bronchopneumonia, pyothorax, tonsillitis, streptococcal infection, ++ phlegmon and staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome. Clinical efficacies were excellent or good in 19 cases with an overall efficacy rate of 86.4%. Adverse effect was found in 1 case with nausea and vomiting, and abnormal laboratory test values observed were 2 cases each of eosinophilia, slight elevation of GOT and GPT and elevation of LDH, but they were not serious.
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PMID:[Pharmacokinetic and clinical studies on sulbactam/ampicillin in children]. 274 50


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