Controlled, comparative study of ciprofloxacin versus ampicillin in treatment of bacterial respiratory tract infections
- PMID: 3555030
Controlled, comparative study of ciprofloxacin versus ampicillin in treatment of bacterial respiratory tract infections
Abstract
The efficacy and safety of ciprofloxacin in bacterial bronchitis were compared with those of ampicillin in a double-blind, prospective clinical trial. Eighty-seven patients received either oral ciprofloxacin (750 mg twice daily) or oral ampicillin (500 mg four times daily). Ciprofloxacin was as effective as ampicillin and produced a 98 percent clinical cure rate. Significantly more pretreatment bacterial isolates were susceptible to ciprofloxacin (p less than 0.05), and ciprofloxacin had a significantly higher rate of sputum sterilization than did ampicillin (p less than 0.05). Ciprofloxacin showed broad in vitro antibacterial activity with particularly low minimal inhibitory concentrations for gram-negative organisms. Ciprofloxacin was well tolerated; there were few adverse effects, and patients had a significantly lower incidence of diarrhea with ciprofloxacin than with ampicillin (p less than 0.05). Ciprofloxacin was an effective and well-tolerated treatment for bacterial bronchitis that had the advantages of broad in vitro antibacterial activity and twice-daily dosing.
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