OBSERVATIONS ON CHOLERA TREATED ORALLY AND INTRAVENOUSLY WITH ANTIBIOTICS - WITH PARTICULAR REFERENCE TO NUMBER OF VIBRIOS EXCRETED IN STOOL
- 1 January 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 37 (5) , 751-+
Abstract
In order to determine the effect of antibiotics on the course of cholera, precise observations of clinical symptoms and quantitative examination of vibrios in the stool were carried out on 17 patients with cholera El Tor from the Philippines. Seven patients were treated orally with kanamycin, tetracycline, chloramphenicol or erythromycin, 7 intravenously with chloramphenicol or tetracycline, and 3 were not given any antibiotic. Both the oral and the intravenous routes of administration of the antibiotics were suitable for shortening the period of diarrhea and reducing the excretion of vibrios in the stool. The number of vibrios in 1 ml of watery stool during the 1st day of illness was about 108 in every case. There was marked reduction in the number within 1 hr., and complete disappearance of vibrios within 10 hr., of the start of treatment in most cases. However, vibrios reappeared later in some cases. Kanamycin, a non-absorbable antibiotic, was less effective than absorbable antibiotics such as chloramphenicol and tetracycline.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- EVALUATION OF VARIOUS ANTIMICROBIAL DRUGS FOR TREATMENT OF CHOLERA1967
- Oral tetracycline therapy in choleraTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1965
- TETRACYCLINE THERAPY IN CHOLERA.1964
- TETRACYCLINE IN THE TREATMENT OF CHOLERAThe Lancet, 1964