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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (
sepsis
)
52,417
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pharmacokinetics and clinical studies of imipenem/cilastatin sodium (IPM/CS), a combined preparation of a new carbapenem antibiotic and a
dehydropeptidase-I
inhibitor, respectively, were carried out in neonates and premature infants in a joint study by a co-research group. 1. Peak blood levels of IPM/CS when administered at 10 mg/10 mg/kg or 20 mg/20 mg/kg by 30- or 60-minute intravenous drip infusion were achieved at the end of infusion. A dose response was clearly observed between the doses and the peak levels achieved. 2. The areas under the blood concentration time curve (AUC) of CS were greater than those of IPM in most patients. Blood half-lives of IPM and CS tended to be longer in younger neonates and premature infants than in older subjects. The blood half-life of CS tended to be longer than that of IPM. 3. Cumulative urinary recovery rates of CS were greater than those of IPM, cumulative urinary recovery rates tended to be greater in older neonates and premature infants than younger subjects. 4. One hundred and thirteen patients were treated for bacterial infections with IPM/CS and 32 patients were treated prophylactically. Daily doses of IPM/CS ranged from 9 mg/9 mg/kg to 150 mg/150 mg/kg. 5. Clinical efficacies of IPM/CS were evaluated in a total of 56 patients with identified etiologic pathogens. The efficacy rate was 98.2% with 33 patients rated as excellent, 22 patients as good and 1 patient as fairly good. (Diagnoses were
sepsis
in 10 patients and meningitis in 2 patients, etc.) Fifty-seven patients with no identified etiologic pathogens were rated as excellent for 22 patients, good for 34 patients and fairly good for 1. The efficacy rate in these patients was 98.2%. Thirty-two patients were treated prophylactically and the results obtained were satisfactory. 6. Bacteriologically, the eradication rate was 94.5% in 56 patients; i.e., 52 were eradicated, 2 were decreased, 1 persisted and 1 was unknown. 7. Adverse effects were observed in 7 (4.4%) of 160 patients, i.e., 2 patients had diarrhea and 2 patients had rash, etc. Abnormal laboratory data considered related to the therapy occurred in 28 (17.6%) of 159 patients, with 10 patients with eosinophilia (6.3%) and elevation of GOT and/or GPT, etc. All these were non serious, and all values returned to normal after discontinuance of therapy. An abnormal prothrombin (PIVKA II) was observed in 1 of 10 patients tested.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Pharmacokinetic and clinical evaluation of imipenem/cilastatin sodium in neonates and premature infants. A study of imipenem/cilastatin sodium by a perinatal co-research group]. 267 29
Cilastatin, an inhibitor of the tubular brush border enzyme
dehydropeptidase-I
, is added in a fixed combination to imipenem. Cilastatin has been demonstrated in different animal models and in one clinical trial, to reduce the nephrotoxicity associated with cyclosporin A. To evaluate a possible nephroprotective effect of cilastatin following allogeneic BMT we conducted a retrospective analysis of 104 patients transplanted in our BMT Unit from January 1991 to January 1995. Imipenem/cilastatin (I/C) was used in a non-randomized manner in 64 patients during this period. Acute renal failure (ARF) was diagnosed in 32 patients (30%). ARF was not associated with gender,
sepsis
, conditioning regimen, underlying disease, bilirubin, or age. VOD occurred in 12/32 (37.5%) of patients with ARF whereas it occurred in only 7/72 (9.7%) of patients without ARF (P < 0.0007). ARF was not correlated with use of aminoglycosides, vancomycin, ciprofloxacine, ceftazidime or amphotericin-B. However, 13 patients of 64 exposed to I/C (20.3%) developed ARF vs 19 of 40 patients (47.5%) who were not exposed to I/C (P < 0.003; OR 0.28). Stratified analysis and multiple logistic regression confirmed the I/C nephroprotective action. The mean cyclosporin A levels in the I/C group were significantly decreased (208.6 +/- 64.9) vs the non-I/C group (265 +/- 118). We conclude that these results suggest I/C may counteract acute cyclosporin A nephrotoxicity following BMT and further prospective clinical trials are needed to confirm if routine administration of cilastatine confers benefit in the BMT setting.
...
PMID:Nephroprotective effect of cilastatin in allogeneic bone marrow transplantation. Results from a retrospective analysis. 889 92