Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (dizziness)
9,689 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Gatifloxacin is a novel extended-spectrum fluoroquinolone with improved gram-positive and anaerobe coverage compared with older agents such as ciprofloxacin. It has good activity (but is slightly less active than ciprofloxacin) against Enterobacteriaceae. Gatifloxacin is generally 2- to 4-fold more active than ciprofloxacin against staphylococci, streptococci and enterococci and 4- to 16-fold more active than ciprofloxacin against anaerobes, including Clostridium and Bacteroides spp. In comparative clinical trials that included patients with lower respiratory tract, urinary tract, skin and soft tissue or gonococcal infections, clinical cure rates of > or = 89% were achieved with oral gatifloxacin 400 mg/day for 7 to 14 days. Data from a subset of North American patients included in a multinational trial showed that oral gatifloxacin 400 mg/day produced a significantly higher clinical cure rate than cefuroxime axetil 250 mg twice daily (89 vs 77%; p = 0.01) in patients with acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis. The clinical efficacy of gatifloxacin was similar to that of clarithromycin or levofloxacin or ceftriaxone (with or without erythromycin) in the treatment of patients with community-acquired pneumonia. Oral gatifloxacin 400 mg/day showed clinical and bacteriological efficacy similar to that of levofloxacin in patients with skin and soft tissue infections. In patients with urinary tract infections, clinical cure and bacterial eradication rates achieved with a single 400 g oral dose of gatifloxacin were similar to those produced with ciprofloxacin. In a pooled analysis of tolerability data from trials that included 3021 patients treated with oral gatifloxacin 400 mg/day, the most commonly reported adverse events were nausea (8%), diarrhoea (4%), headache (4%) and dizziness (3%). The drug was reported to be well tolerated. Gatifloxacin does not appear to cause phototoxic effects.
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PMID:Gatifloxacin. 1055 38

Respiratory tract infections (RTIs), the most common indication for outpatient antimicrobial therapy, impose a heavy medical and societal burden and present a difficult therapeutic challenge in the face of increasing pathogen resistance worldwide. Gatifloxacin is a new broad-spectrum fluoroquinolone with excellent activity against prevalent respiratory bacteria, including penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae and atypical pathogens. A multicenter, open-label, noncomparative surveillance study carried out in Mexico evaluated the safety and efficacy of oral gatifloxacin 400 mg once daily in 17,923 adult outpatients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) (n = 3322), acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis (AECB) (n = 5885), and acute bacterial sinusitis (n = 8716). Voluntary, unpaid physician participation contributed to an unbiased study design. Physician-assessed global rate of cure or improvement was 96.3%; efficacy was 95.8% in CAP, 96.1% in AECB, and 96.4% in sinusitis. The incidences of relapse (1.5%) and therapeutic failure (0.7%) were low. The most commonly reported adverse events, nausea (2.76%), headache (2.20%), and dizziness (1.33%), were generally mild and self-limited. Oral gatifloxacin 400 mg once daily is effective and safe for patients with CAP, AECB, and acute sinusitis.
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PMID:Multicenter evaluation of the efficacy and safety of gatifloxacin in Mexican adult outpatients with respiratory tract infections. 1131 29

Gatifloxacin is an advanced-generation fluoroquinolone with demonstrated efficacy and safety as therapy for community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). As part of a phase IV postmarketing surveillance program (TeqCES), 136 outpatients with CAP whose sputum was culture-positive for Streptococcus pneumoniae were enrolled in an open-label trial of oral gatifloxacin 400 mg daily for 7 to 14 days. An antibiogram of isolates showed 100% susceptibility to gatifloxacin (MIC(90) 0.5 micro g/mL) and respective susceptibilities of 67%, 70%, and 80% to penicillin, erythromycin, and tetracycline. Clinical cure was achieved in 95.3% of evaluable patients, including seven patients infected with penicillin-resistant S. pneumoniae (MIC > or =2 micro g/mL). The bacteriologic eradication rate for S. pneumoniae was 94.5%. Diarrhea, nausea, and dizziness, the most common adverse events in CAP patients (<3%), were generally mild to moderate; no serious adverse events were recorded. These results support recommendations to treat CAP, particularly due to S. pneumoniae including multidrug-resistant strains, with the newer 8-methoxy-fluoroquinolone, gatifloxacin.
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PMID:Gatifloxacin used for therapy of outpatient community-acquired pneumonia caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae. 1237 38