cefoxitin has been researched along with Alcoholism* in 1 studies
1 trial(s) available for cefoxitin and Alcoholism
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Treatment of intra-abdominal infections is appropriate with single-agent or combination antibiotic therapy.
In a prospective, randomized, single-blind trial, we studied 112 adults with intra-abdominal infections and compared antibiotic therapy with cefoxitin plus placebo to therapy with tobramycin plus clindamycin. Seventy-five percent of patients receiving tobramycin-clindamycin and 71% of those receiving cefoxitin-placebo had either shock, bacteremia, malnutrition, alcoholism, rapidly or ultimately fatal underlying disease, infection originating from the distal small bowel or colon, or had had failed therapy before treatment ("high-risk" group). One third of the patients in both groups grew bacteria in the initial culture resistant to the antibiotic regimen used. Ten patients receiving cefoxitin-placebo (17%) and 11 receiving tobramycin-clindamycin (21%) had recurrence of infection or died of infection (clinical failures). Nineteen failures occurred in high-risk patients (p less than 0.05) and 17 were in patients that had antibiotic-resistant bacteria in the initial culture (p less than 0.01). Adverse effects were rare and remitted after antibiotics were stopped. Our results suggest that both cefoxitin and tobramycin-clindamycin are appropriate antibiotic regimens to treat intra-abdominal infections. Clinical failure is more common in high-risk patients and when antibiotic-resistant organisms are isolated from initial cultures. Topics: Adult; Alcoholism; Bacterial Infections; Cefoxitin; Clindamycin; Clinical Trials as Topic; Drug Resistance, Microbial; Drug Therapy, Combination; Enterobacteriaceae; Humans; Intestinal Diseases; Nutrition Disorders; Prospective Studies; Random Allocation; Risk; Tobramycin | 1985 |