Abstract
Peritonitis is still a major problem in CAPD. The synthetic chemotherapeutic quinolone ciprofloxacin offers new possibilities for oral treatment of this complication. The efficacy of ciprofloxacin as first-line antibiotic was investigated in five consecutive peritonitis episodes of five patients. The dosage was deduced from a pilot study and consisted of an intra-peritoneal loading dose during the first 24 hours. Simultaneously ciprofloxacin was given orally and thereafter only the oral medication was continued. The causative microorganisms in the 5 episodes were (MIC90 in brackets): nonfermentative Gram negative rod, group IVc-2 (0.6 micrograms/ml), S. aureus (0.25 micrograms ml), Strep. faecalis (0.4 micrograms/ml), S. aureus + S. epidermidis (both 0.25 micrograms/ml) and S. aureus (0.13 micrograms/ml). The clinical course was uncomplicated and all episodes were cured with ciprofloxacin monotherapy. In 4 patients all dialysate concentrations exceeded 2.3 micrograms/ml (mean 5.8 micrograms/ml). In one patient dialysate concentrations varied between 2.2 and 7.5 micrograms/ml during the first 24 hrs and between 0.4 and 1.2 micrograms/ml thereafter. Despite these low dialysate concentrations, the episode caused by S. aureus (MIC90 0.25 micrograms/ml) was cured uneventfully. We conclude that ciprofloxacin may be useful for the treatment of CAPD peritonitis. Large interindividual differences in dialysate concentrations should be taken into account
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 126-129 |
Journal | Advances in peritoneal dialysis. Conference on Peritoneal Dialysis |
Volume | 6 |
Publication status | Published - 1990 |