nystatin-a1 and Cellulitis

nystatin-a1 has been researched along with Cellulitis* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for nystatin-a1 and Cellulitis

ArticleYear
Clinical experience with prophylactic antibiotic bowel suppression in burn patients.
    Surgery, 1978, Volume: 83, Issue:5

    An oral prophylactic antibiotic regimen (neomycin-erythromycin-nystatin) aimed at suppression of the bowel flora was utilized in 20 patients with thermal injury treated in a laminar flow burn unit with strict sterile technique and reverse isolation. The regimen was utilized for an average of 24 days. Surface cultures were obtained twice weekly from multiple areas of the burn wound, and burn wound biopsies were performed one to two times weekly. These patients were compared prospectively with a group of 10 patients treated in otherwise identical fashion, save for the omission of the antibiotic suppressive regimen. Bacterial colonization of the burn wound occurred an average of 19 days after admission in the group receiving antibiotics compared to 4 days after admission in the control group (p less than 0.01). Positive burn biopsies (more than 10(5) bacteria per gm of tissue) were observed twice as often in the group not receiving antibiotics (p less than 0.16) as were infectious complications of several types: bacteremia, burn wound sepsis, urinary tract infections, pneumonitis, cellulitis (0.10 less than p less than 0.20). Staphylococcal or fungal overgrowth were not encountered in the patients receiving prophylactic antibiotics, nor was there an adverse effect on serum creatinine levels with the prolonged use of neomycin.

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Bacterial Infections; Burns; Cellulitis; Child; Child, Preschool; Erythromycin; Escherichia coli; Humans; Intestines; Middle Aged; Neomycin; Nystatin; Pneumonia; Prospective Studies; Sepsis; Staphylococcus aureus; Urinary Tract Infections

1978
[Recurring mycotic abscess following continuous irrigation of large abscess cavities using chloramphenicol solution].
    Zentralblatt fur Chirurgie, 1969, Aug-30, Volume: 94, Issue:35

    Topics: Abdominal Muscles; Abscess; Adult; Candidiasis; Cellulitis; Chloramphenicol; Chronic Disease; Enterobacteriaceae; Female; Gastrointestinal Diseases; Humans; Liver Abscess; Male; Middle Aged; Nystatin; Retroperitoneal Space; Staphylococcus; Streptococcus pyogenes; Therapeutic Irrigation

1969