Current use for old antibacterial agents: polymyxins, rifamycins, and aminoglycosides
- PMID: 19909897
- DOI: 10.1016/j.idc.2009.06.004
Current use for old antibacterial agents: polymyxins, rifamycins, and aminoglycosides
Abstract
This article reviews three classes of antibacterial agents that are uncommonly used in bacterial infections and therefore can be thought of as special-use agents. The polymyxins are reserved for gram-negative bacilli that are resistant to virtually all other classes of drugs. Rifampin is used therapeutically, occasionally as a companion drug in treatment of refractory gram-positive coccal infections, especially those involving foreign bodies. Rifaximin is a new rifamycin that is a strict enteric antibiotic approved for treatment of traveler's diarrhea and is showing promise as a possible agent for refractory Clostridium difficile infections. The aminoglycosides are used mainly as companion drugs for the treatment of resistant gram-negative bacillary infections and for gram-positive coccal endocarditis.
Republished in
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Current use for old antibacterial agents: polymyxins, rifamycins, and aminoglycosides.Med Clin North Am. 2011 Jul;95(4):819-42, viii-ix. doi: 10.1016/j.mcna.2011.03.007. Med Clin North Am. 2011. PMID: 21679793
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