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Query: KEGG:D00307 (
Doxycycline
)
1,090
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Doxycycline
concentrations provided by the antibiotic diffusion from paper discs into sterile agarized medium and the medium plated with staphylococci and Coli bacteria were studied at different distances from the disc center.
Infection
of the nutrient medium with the test cultures had no effect on the antibiotic diffusion rate. A linear relation between the logarithm of the antibiotic concentration in the agar and distance from the disc centre were found. Probably it is possible to determine the MIC of the antibiotic with respect to various microorganisms by the value of the radius of the growth inhibition zone around the disc using diagrams expressing such a relation.
...
PMID:[Development of a method for the quantitative assessment of the microorganism sensitivity to antibiotics by using discs. A study of the patterns of doxycycline diffusion from discs into the nutrient agar]. 32 48
A prospective double-blind study on the effects of doxycycline as a prophylactic antimicrobial in elective colonic surgery is presented. One hundred-eighteen patients were evaluated. Fifty-eight were treated and 60 were controls. Two hundred milligrams, doxycycline or placebo (two capsules) were given orally four to six hours prior to surgery and 100 mg or placebo (one capsule) for five days postoperatively.
Doxycycline
levels in serum and tissues were determined and related to the MICvalues of the contaminants of the operative field. A significantly lower incidence of abdominal wound sepsis, intra-abdominal complications, and septicemia was recorded in the doxycycline group compared to the control group, 12.1 and 45% respectively. The prophylactic effect was most pronounced in patients with a negative wound culture upon closure. Macroscopical peritoneal contamination was associated with less severe consequencies in the doxycycline group.
Infections
in the perineal field, 3/15 vs 8/17, appeared alone in the doxycycline group, whereas they were combined with abdominal sepsis in 6/8 among the controls. Treatment also reduced the incidence of repeat laparotomy due to septic complications, 0 vs 8. Thus systemic per and postoperative prophylaxis with doxycycline significantly reduced both the incidence and the severity of postoperative sepsis in potentially contaminated elective colorectal surgery without any adverse reactions.
...
PMID:Systemic prophylaxis with doxycycline in surgery of the colon and rectum. 64 74
Anaerobic Gram-negative bacteria dominate in periodontitis locations, while Gram-positive bacteria characterize healthy sites. A well-established Gram-positive flora might therefore inhibit the colonization of Gram-negative pathogens. The purpose of the present investigation was to examine whether endogenous S. sanguis could prevent, or reduce, periodontal bone loss in rats infected with a virulent P. gingivalis strain. Sixty specific pathogen-free Wistar rats were divided into 6 groups.
Doxycycline
was administered in the drinking water for 2 weeks to the groups A, B, C, and D to suppress the preexisting microflora in the mouth. Rats in groups A and C were subsequently inoculated with an S. sanguis strain, isolated from one of the rats, once a day for 5 d.
Infection
with P. gingivalis 381 was then carried out for 5 d in groups A, B, and E. Group F was not treated with doxycycline nor infected with bacteria and served as untreated control. Six weeks after the P. gingivalis inoculation, the rats were killed. Periodontal bone levels were assessed radiographically and morphometrically, and serum antibody against P. gingivalis 381 was determined by a fluorescence immunoassay. Periodontal bone support, determined radiographically, was reduced in group B (doxycycline-treated, P. gingivalis-inoculated) compared with the other groups. In contrast, the morphometric determination showed no differences between the groups. In group B antibody levels against two different P. gingivalis 381 cell surface antigens were significantly elevated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Periodontal bone loss in Porphyromonas gingivalis-infected specific pathogen-free rats after preinoculation with endogenous Streptococcus sanguis. 133 45
Infection
with Borrelia burgdorferi can induce various skin manifestations. The type of skin manifestation and the histopathological picture depend on the stage of infection and vary from local inflammatory infiltrates to chronic atrophic skin disease. Involvement of subcutaneous tissue has been observed only very rarely. We report on two patients suffering from nodular panniculitis (Pfeifer-Weber-Christian) and present evidence that the disease was caused by Borrelia burgdorferi. In one of the cases Borrelia burgdorferi was repeatedly isolated from skin and subcutaneous tissue biopsies in spite of repeated high-dose therapy with ceftriaxone,
Doxycycline
and cefotaxime.
...
PMID:[Nodular panniculitis: a manifestation of Lyme borreliosis?]. 157 1
A double blind study of daily doxycycline (100 mg) vs. weekly mefloquine (250 mg) was performed on United States soldiers training in Thailand to assess the effect of doxycycline malaria prophylaxis on the incidence of gastrointestinal infections. During a 5 week period, 49% (58/119) of soldiers receiving doxycycline and 48% (64/134) of soldiers receiving mefloquine reported an episode of diarrhea.
Infection
with bacterial enteric pathogens was identified in 39% (47/119) of soldiers taking doxycycline and 46% (62/134) of soldiers taking mefloquine. Forty-four percent (59/134) of soldiers receiving mefloquine and 36% (43/119) of soldiers receiving doxycycline were infected with enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC), while 9% (12/134) of soldiers receiving mefloquine and 4% of soldiers receiving doxycycline were infected with Campylobacter. Side effects from either medication were minimal. After 5 weeks in Thailand, the percent of non-ETEC strains resistant to greater than or equal to 2 antibiotics increased from 65% (77/119) to 86% (95/111) in soldiers on mefloquine and from 79% (84/106) to 93% (88/95) in soldiers on doxycycline.
Doxycycline
prophylaxis did not prevent or increase diarrheal disease in soldiers deployed to Thailand where ETEC and other bacterial pathogens are often resistant to tetracyclines.
...
PMID:A comparative study of gastrointestinal infections in United States soldiers receiving doxycycline or mefloquine for malaria prophylaxis. 226 64
By transposon mutagenesis a tetracycline-susceptible strain of Listeria monocytogenes (MIC 1 mg/l. for tetracycline and 0.25 mg/l. for doxycycline) was rendered resistant (MIC 64 mg/l. for tetracycline and 16 mg/l. for doxycycline).
Infection
of mice with this resistant strain led to an acute infection. Treatment with 2 x 2 mg tetracycline per day did not influence the course of infection during the first 3 days, indicating that the nonspecific resistance, mediated mainly by macrophages and granulocytes, was not affected by this treatment. The second phase of infection, characterized by a continuous resistance to infection due to macrophages activated by T-lymphocytes was, however, definitely hampered. Even acquired immunity to a secondary infection was impaired by treatment with tetracycline, indicating that cell-mediated immunity can be blocked. The course of infection of athymic, nude mice which are unable to build up a cell-mediated immune response, was not affected by tetracycline treatment.
Doxycycline
expressed the same activities as tetracycline.
...
PMID:Inhibitory effect of tetracycline and doxycycline on resistance of mice to infection with a tetracycline-resistant strain of Listeria monocytogenes. 314 4
Our study was carried out on 53 women who had been infertile for more than a year and who had cervical mucus infection. In 13 cases (group A) there was no other known associated factor to cause the infertility. In 26 cases (group B) there was an obvious associated factor and in a further 14 cases there was a latent associated factor. The physical characteristics as well as the bacteriological appearances of the mucus (which included a systematic search for aerobic bacteria and for chlamydia trachomatis (CT) and for ureaplasma urealyticum (UU) were studied both before and 6-8 weeks after treatment with doxycycline polyphosphate given in doses of 100 mg twice daily. Before treatment the bacteria most often found were escherichia coli (20 cases) and enterococci (18 cases). CT was only found once and UU six times, usually in association with other bacteria. In 75.5% of cases the treatment made the affecting organism go; and cut down or removed entirely the number of leucocytes in the mucus in 73.5% of cases. But the physical characteristics of the mucus were only improved in 43% of cases, and in 18 cases a new infective organism was found in the mucus after treatment. However, it was in too low a concentration to determine its pathogenicity. There were nine pregnancies within 4 months of the start of treatment, which means that 30% in group A and 19% in group B became pregnant.
Infection
of the cervical mucus therefore does really seem to be a factor in lowered fertility in certain women CT and UU seem to be rarely the responsible organisms.
Doxycycline
phosphophate in an efficient and well tolerated treatment in these infections.
...
PMID:[Results of treating infections of the cervical mucosa with doxycycline polyphosphate in 53 infertile women]. 672 80
Infection
with the spirochete Treponema pallidum causes syphilis. Transmission of syphilis occurs through sexual contact with persons who have infectious mucocutaneous lesions. Before the advent of penicillin, this infection was responsible for a large portion of the debilitated patients residing in mental institutions. Later during this century, the disease became somewhat uncommon, only to see a resurgence during the early part of this decade. Syphilis progresses through stages defined as primary, secondary, latent, and tertiary. Diagnosis of this infection is by clinical examination, dark-field microscopy, and serology. Penicillin is the treatment of choice for all stages of syphilis.
Doxycycline
and tetracycline are acceptable alternatives in some penicillin-allergic patients. If patients are pregnant or have central nervous system involvement, alternative regimens should not be used because of lack of efficacy and/or fetal toxicity. Therefore, these patients must be desensitized and treated with penicillin. No effective vaccine for this infection is currently available.
...
PMID:Syphilis in women. 1102 69
Mycobacterium marinum is a waterborne mycobacterium that commonly infects fish and amphibians worldwide.
Infection
in humans occurs occasionally, in most cases as a granulomatous infection localized in the skin, typically following minor trauma on the hands. For this reason, infection is especially common among aquarium keepers. Such local infection may-though infrequently-spread to tendon sheaths or joints. Disseminated disease, which is rare, can occur in immunosuppressed patients. In order to obtain a definitive diagnosis, culture and histopathological examination of biopsies from skin or other tissues are recommended.
Infections
sometimes heal spontaneously, but drug treatment is usually necessary for several months in order to cure the infection.
Doxycycline
or clarithromycin is used most commonly, although in severe cases, a combination of rifampicin and ethambutol is recommended.
...
PMID:Mycobacterium marinum: ubiquitous agent of waterborne granulomatous skin infections. 1704 3
Leptospirosis is an emerging zoonosis. In the Andaman Islands during the early twentieth century, it occurred in the penal settlements of the British India Administration, mostly as Weil's disease, an acute febrile illness with hepato-renal complications. It was caused by leptospires belonging to groups Akiamy A and Andamans A. After the 1930s nothing further is known regarding the disease until the late 1980s, when Andaman haemorrhagic fever (AHF), a mysterious illness with the majority of cases presenting pulmonary involvement, appeared. AHF was later identified as leptospirosis and severe pulmonary haemorrhage was shown for the first time as a complication of leptospirosis from India. Leptospirosis continues to occur in the Islands annually. It generally presents as two separate clinical syndromes: the hepato-renal form, and the pulmonary form, which is associated with high case fatality rates ranging from 10 to 15%.
Infections
are due to a variety of serovars, Valbuzzi being the commonest. Leptospira interrogans sensu stricto has been the predominant infecting species.
Doxycycline
has been shown to confer a beneficial effect in reducing the clinical illness and mortality during outbreaks. The history of leptospirosis in the Islands, its epidemiology, clinical spectrum, characteristics of the isolates and control are reviewed and discussed in this article.
...
PMID:Leptospirosis in the Andaman Islands, India. 1799 99
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