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  5. Differential Antibiotic‐Induced Endotoxin Release in Severe Melioidosis

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Article
English
2000

Differential Antibiotic‐Induced Endotoxin Release in Severe Melioidosis

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English
2000
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
Vol 181 (3)
DOI: 10.1086/315306

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Sir Nicholas White
Sir Nicholas White

University Of Cambridge

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Andrew J. H. Simpson
Steven M. Opal
Brian Angus
+5 more

Abstract

Severe melioidosis is a life-threatening, systemic bacterial infection caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei. A prospective, randomized treatment trial was conducted in northeast Thailand to compare ceftazidime (a penicillin-binding protein [PBP]-3-specific agent that causes release of large amounts of endotoxin in vitro) and imipenem (a PBP-2-specific agent that kills B. pseudomallei more rapidly but releases low amounts of endotoxin) in severe melioidosis over a 6-h time course after the first dose of antibiotic. Despite similar clinical, microbiological, endotoxin, and cytokine measures at study entry, ceftazidime-treated patients (n = 34) had significantly greater systemic endotoxin (P < .001) than patients treated with imipenem (n = 34) after the first dose of antibiotic. No overall difference in mortality was observed (35% in both groups [95% confidence interval, 20%–50%]). Differential antibiotic-induced endotoxin release is demonstrable in severe melioidosis. These differences in endotoxin release did not appear to have a significant impact on survival in this group of patients.

How to cite this publication

Andrew J. H. Simpson, Steven M. Opal, Brian Angus, Jan M. Prins, Jean Palardy, Nicolas A. Parejo, Wipada Chaowagul, Sir Nicholas White (2000). Differential Antibiotic‐Induced Endotoxin Release in Severe Melioidosis. The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 181(3), pp. 1014-1019, DOI: 10.1086/315306.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2000

Authors

8

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

The Journal of Infectious Diseases

DOI

10.1086/315306

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