A. Soylu et al., EVALUATION OF THE RESISTANCE INDUCTION IN ENTERIC FLORA IN CHILDREN CAUSED BY ORAL AMPICILLIN PLUS SULBACTAM, Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy, 39(6), 1997, pp. 833-835
To evaluate the effect on bacterial resistance of a beta-lactamase inh
ibitor, resistance patterns of predominant bacteria in enteric flora w
ere evaluated before and after a 7-day course of oral ampicillin (100
mg/kg/days, old, in 16 patients) and ampicillin-sulbactam (50 mg/kg/da
y of ampicillin, bd, in 32 patients) therapy. Ampicillin and ampicilli
n-sulbactam MICs for Escherichia coli, the predominant bacteria in all
cases, and resistance rates of E. coli species to both antibiotics we
re 51.20 +/- 13.80 mg/L, 87.5% and 4.84 +/- 2.11 mg/L, 21% before the
treatment respectively. Post-treatment MICs and resistance rates were
106.51 +/- 14.05 mg/L, 100% and 15.89 +/- 5.76 mg/L, 37.5% respectivel
y, indicating a significant increase in MICs of both antibiotics (P <
0.05), being more prominent in the case of ampicillin-sulbactam (about
four-fold). We concluded that oral ampicillin-sulbactam could also de
crease the susceptibility of the enteric flora to ampicillin.