Acute Renal Failure Associated with Combined Gentamicin and Cephalothin Therapy
- 19 May 1973
- Vol. 2 (5863) , 396-397
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.2.5863.396
Abstract
Three patients with normal renal function developed acute renal failure between the ninth and twenty-seventh days of combined gentamicin and cephalothin therapy. The dose of gentamicin (4-6 mg/kg/day) was in the normal range, but that of cephalothin (180 mg/kg/day) was abnormally high. The nephropathy was of the tubular-interstitial type and the clinical picture similar to that seen in acute drug-induced nephropathies. Frusemide was given only after the onset of renal failure. In these three patients the high intravenous doses of cephalothin combined with gentamicin were probably nephrotoxic.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relative nephrotoxicity of cephalosporin antibiotics in an animal model.1972
- Nephrotoxicity and acute renal failure associated with cephalothin and cephaloridine.1971
- [Acute renal failure following gentamicin-cephalosporin association therapy].1971
- Declining Renal Function Associated with Administration of CephalothinSouthern Medical Journal, 1970
- Treatment of Bacterial Endocarditis with CephalothinNew England Journal of Medicine, 1968
- Laboratory and Clinical Studies of GentamicinAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1963