Plasma and sputum erythromycin concentrations in chronic bronchitis.
Open Access
- 31 May 1980
- Vol. 35 (6) , 441-445
- https://doi.org/10.1136/thx.35.6.441
Abstract
Plasma and sputum concentrations of erythromycin were measured in 10 patients with chronic bronchitis during an eight-day course of a new formulation of erythromycin stearate. The plasma erythromycin levels compared favourably with the minimal inhibitory concentrations for common respiratory pathogens and indicated adequate gastrointestinal absorption when the drug was taken immediately before food. Sputum erythromycin levels were variable and in some patients low or undetectable. Measurable sputum erythromycin levels were approximately 10% of plasma levels with no evidence of accumulation and were of similar order of magnitude to the minimal inhibitory concentrations for common respiratory pathogens except Haemophilus influenzae. There was no correlation between sputum and plasma erythromycin levels. There was a trend for higher erythromycin levels in sputum containing increasing amounts of pus and also when plasma levels increased.This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- A comparison of ampicillin, erythromycin and erythromycin with sulphametopyrazine in the treatment of infective exacerbations of chronic bronchitisRespiratory Medicine, 1978
- A new look at erythromycinPublished by Oxford University Press (OUP) ,1977
- Human Respiratory Tract Infections with Mycoplasmas and Their in vitro Susceptibility to Tetracyclines and Some Other AntibioticsChemotherapy, 1975
- Amoxycillin levels in sputum, serum, and salivaThorax, 1974
- Amoxycillin in the treatment of chronic non-tuberculous bronchial infectionsRespiratory Medicine, 1972
- Tetracycline levels in bronchial secretionsJournal of Clinical Pathology, 1970
- Ampicillin levels in sputum, serum, and salivaThorax, 1970
- TREATMENT OF CHRONIC BRONCHITIS WITH AMPICILLIN Some Pharmacological ObservationsThe Lancet, 1965
- Ampicillin in the Treatment of Haemophilus influenzae Infections of the Respiratory TractThorax, 1964
- The mucosal epithelium of the respiratory tract in muco‐purulent bronchitis caused byHæmophilus influenzæThe Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology, 1953