Studies on the Additive Effect of Polymyxin B and the Bactericidal Activity of Human Serum against Serratia marcescens
- 1 January 1975
- journal article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Chemotherapy
- Vol. 21 (3-4) , 189-204
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000221860
Abstract
Two of twelve examined S. marcescens strains were promptly killed by 80% (v/v) fresh human serum (within 20 min), analogous to a serum-sensitive control strain of Escherichia coli; ten strains, however, were killed by fresh serum only after extended incubation (2–4 h). The combination of therapeutically achievable concentrations of polymyxin B (range 5 to 1.25 μg/ml) and fresh, but not heat-inactivated human serum was found to exert an accelerated, additive effect against 9 of 10 ‘delayed serum-sensitive’ isolates of S. marcescens, an organism that is characterized by intrinsic resistance against polymyxins. The combination of 80% (v/v) fresh, defibrinated human blood and polymyxin B likewise resulted in an additive effect. Polymyxin B treatment of S. marcescens strains caused a prompt, marked, though reversible bile salt susceptibility of the cells; in contrast, the effect induced by fresh serum was slight and not apparent until several hours after exposure.Keywords
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