Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
52,417 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To evaluate pharmacokinetics and clinical efficacy of flomoxef (6315-S, FMOX) in neonates, FMOX was administered to 21 neonates. With 20 mg/kg and 40 mg/kg of intravenous drip-infusion of FMOX 60 minutes, half lives (T 1/2's) was 64.9 minutes and 130.3 minutes, respectively, and when 20 mg/kg of FMOX was infused intravenously to 2 cases, half lives were 70.8 minutes and 110.1 minutes, respectively. When 45-100 mg/kg of FMOX was administered to 17 neonates with infections (pneumonia 8, sepsis 1, sepsis suspected 2, intrauterine infection 2, urinary tract infection 2, omphalitis 2), the efficacy rate was 88.2% (15 of 17). No adverse reactions were observed clinically in the 21 neonates. Transient elevation of eosinophilia was observed in 1 case and transient elevation of S-GOT and S-GPT 1 in another. These results suggest that FMOX is an effective and safe antibiotic to use in neonates.
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PMID:[Pharmacokinetic and clinical evaluations of flomoxef in neonates]. 178 76

Flomoxef sodium (FMOX) was evaluated experimentally and clinically in neonates. 1. Serum concentrations and urinary excretions of the drug were examined after a bolus intravenous injection at 20 mg/kg to 22 neonates 1-30 days after birth (durations of pregnancy 31-43 weeks, weights at birth 1,650-4,040 g) and 5 infants 50-95 days after birth (durations of pregnancy 33-40 weeks, weights at birth 1,720-3,308 g). Serum concentrations were 10.8-67.6 micrograms/ml (mean 32.7 +/- 2.8 micrograms/ml) and 25.1-52.0 micrograms/ml (mean 38.9 +/- 4.3 micrograms/ml) in the neonates and the infants, respectively, at their peaks (0.5 hour value), decreased thereafter with half-lives of 0.96-5.59 hours (mean 2.20 +/- 0.26 hours value), and 0.97-1.54 hours (mean 1.22 +/- 0.12 hours value), respectively. Serum levels decreased to 0.2-17.1 micrograms/ml (mean 2.9 +/- 0.6 micrograms/ml) and N.D. -1.1 micrograms/ml (mean 0.4 +/- 0.2 micrograms/ml) after 8 hours, respectively. The urinary recovery rates of the drug in the first 8 hours after administration were 15.0-96.0% (mean 53.7 +/- 4.9%) and 29.9-73.3% (mean 62.4 +/- 9.4%) in the neonates and in the infants, respectively. 2. FMOX was administered to 78 neonates (durations of pregnancy 31-42 weeks, weights at birth 1,420-3,860 g) in whom bacterial infections were established or suspected, and clinical, bacteriological, and side effects were evaluated. In 47 neonates examined (1 with sepsis, 3 with acute upper respiratory infections, 18 with acute pneumonia, 1 with umbilical infection, 1 with impetigo, 4 with acute urinary tract infections, 1 with acute otitis externa, 1 with periproctal abscess, and 17 with intrauterine infections), the treatment was markedly effective in 41, and effective in 6, with an overall efficacy rate of 100%. The bacterilogical effects of the drug on 3 strains of Staphylococcus aureus, 1 strain of Streptococcus pneumoniae, 1 strain of Streptococcus agalactiae, 9 strains of Escherichia coli, and 2 strains of Haemophilus influenzae which were responsible for these infections were all rated as "eradicated". Moreover, the drug, administered with or without prophylactic intentions showed complete prophylactic effects in all 27 cases tested. No side effects were observed in any of the patients. Concerning abnormal clinical laboratory results, increases in GOT were noted in 2, eosinophilia in 1, and thrombocytosis in 1, but these abnormalities were invariably mild and the normalized in 1 patient without treatment. The results suggest that FMOX is useful and safe also in neonates.
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PMID:[Laboratory and clinical evaluations of flomoxef sodium in neonates]. 178 77

Flomoxef (FMOX, 6315-S), a new parenteral oxacephem antibiotic was investigated for its clinical efficacy and pharmacokinetics. The results obtained are summarized below. 1. Twenty-eight patients were treated with 39-152 mg/kg per day of FMOX by intravenous administration. Diagnosis of patients were pneumonia in 15 patients, acute upper respiratory tract infection in 5, acute enterocolitis in 3, urinary tract infection in 2 and cholangitis, suppurative lymphadenitis and suspicious sepsis in 1 patient each. Clinical effect was excellent in 7 cases, good in 8, fair in 5, poor in 2 and 6 cases were excluded because therapy periods were too short and other antibiotics were used together. Efficacy rate was 68% and the rate of bacterial disappearance was 83%. 2. Rash was found in 5 cases and thrombocytosis was found in 1 out of 28 cases. However, no severe adverse reaction was encountered. 3. The peak serum level of FMOX was 51.0 micrograms/ml after 20 mg/kg of drip infusion for 30 minutes and the half-life was 17.2 minutes in alpha-phase and 58.2 minutes in beta-phase.
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PMID:[Clinical and pharmacokinetics evaluation of flomoxef in pediatrics]. 343 Jul 19

A case of toxic-shock syndrome due to Streptococcus pyogenes is reported. A 76-year-old female was admitted with complaints of fevers and chills. She had been suffering from cellulitis on her right dorsum pedis for 7 months. Laboratory data on admission showed elevated values of WBC, CRP, and dysfunction of the liver and kidney. She was diagnosed as sepsis due to the cellulitis, and was treated with PIPC and FMOX. However, several hours after admission, her blood pressure decreased and oliguria appeared. Bacteriological examinations from the blood and the cellulitis revealed group A beta-hemolytic Streptococcus which gave streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin (T-28, SPE.B + C). She died 23 hours after her admission in spite of changing antibiotics to a high-dose of PC-G therapy. This is one of the rare cases of toxic shock-like syndrome due to Streptococcus pyogenes from the cellulitis of the dorsum pedis.
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PMID:[A case of toxic shock-like syndrome due to Streptococcus pyogenes]. 759 93