Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 42 patients with induction treatment of acute myeloblastic and lymphoblastic
leukaemia
the authors compared efficacy of selective decontamination of the gastrointestinal tract in prevention of infections during neutropenia less than 0.5.10(9)/l in two comparable groups. Twenty-two patients were treated with
Ofloxacin
(Tarivid, Hoechst Co.), 20 patients with Trimetroprim-Sulfamethoxazol (Biseptol, Polfa Co.). Both groups had concurrently also Ketoconazol in prevention of mycotic infection. The investigation revealed that Tarivid is a suitable alternative drug for selective decontamination, because it delays the onset of acquired infection, as compared with Biseptol, it reduced more efficiently the frequency of Gram-negative colonization and life-threatening Gram-negative sepsis, caused by resistent strains; its tolerance is significantly better. There was no significant difference in the occurrence of febrile days, febrile episodes, the duration of antibiotic treatment, the number of sepsis in two groups. The effect of Tarivid and Biseptol on the Gram-positive microbial flora is inadequate. Subclavian catheter increases in particularly the risk of Gram-positive sepsis in both groups.
...
PMID:[Comparison of Tarivid and Biseptol in the prevention of bacterial infections in patients with acute leukemia]. 159 5
Continuous cell lines are frequently contaminated with microorganisms, mycoplasmas being the most prominent and cumbersome. In our experience, of the 300 cell lines examined more than one third was infected with mycoplasmas. Mycoplasma contamination can affect virtually every parameter and functional activity of a cultured cell. An alternative to the recommended disposal of infected cultures is an attempt to eliminate the contaminants. Adding antibiotics with strong activity against mycoplasmas to the culture medium is a simple, inexpensive and efficient decontamination method. Here, we studied the effectiveness of the new antibiotic enrofloxacin (Baytril) developed specifically for use against mycoplasmas. Baytril is a new synthetic agent from the group of quinolone derivatives that are DNA gyrase inhibitors. Thirty-two chronically infected cell lines (27 human
leukemia
-lymphoma cell lines) were treated with Baytril in a prospective study in direct comparison with three other well-established anti-mycoplasma regimens, the antibiotics BM-Cyclin,
Ciprobay
and MRA (Mycoplasma Removal Agent). Mycoplasmas were detected by DNA staining, agar colony growth, DNA-RNA hybridization, polymerase chain reaction, and monoclonal antibody staining. Treatment with Baytril eliminated the contaminants in 30/32 cultures (94%). The cure rates for
Ciprobay
, BM-Cyclin and MRA were 91%, 81%, and 75%, respectively. The IC50 values of Baytril for cell lines varied over a wide range depending on the type of hematopoietic cell lineage with T- and B-cell lines being more sensitive targets. Baytril-treated cell lines remained mycoplasma-negative over a 12-week antibiotic-free culture period. Low levels of mycoplasma infection were shown not to persist by repeat testing after growth without antibiotics. A retrospective analysis of anti-mycoplasma treatments with BM-Cyclin,
Ciprobay
, MRA or Baytril showed that 265/351 cultures (75%) were immediately cured of mycoplasma; however, all of the remaining, mycoplasma-positive cultures harboring mycoplasms resistant to the first antibiotic could be cleaned up by a second round with a different antibiotic. Baytril is an efficient anti-mycoplasma antibiotic and based on its high cure rate might be the treatment of first choice.
Leukemia
1994 Aug
PMID:Effective treatment of mycoplasma contamination in cell lines with enrofloxacin (Baytril). 752 Jan 3