Sunday, November 2, 2014

3. Rarely affect: chloramphenicol, metronidazole, rifampin, tetracycline, and vancomycin rifaximin


Clostridium difficile is a bacterium that lives in environments without oxygen (anaerobic) prospan that reproduces by spores and lives in the human gut. It is notable that there is plenty of this microorganism in the first months of life of infants but then decreases to constitute a small percentage of our flora. Due to the use of antibiotics has been a significant increase in infections caused by this bacillus that usually do not attack humans, apparently the antibiotic destroys flora who keeps the growth of C. diff. Given this lack of antagonists on C diff grows and reproduces wildly to produce a condition prospan called pseudomembranous colitis which can be fatal. Antibiotics identified and that we must try to avoid taking are:
3. Rarely affect: chloramphenicol, metronidazole, rifampin, tetracycline, and vancomycin rifaximin If we imagine this table together with ulcerative colitis or Crohn Enf or any other health conditions, the picture is complicated. Treating infections are initiated C diff are vancomycin and metronidazole and kanamycin may be added in some cases. The problem with these treatments is that kill but live bacillus spores is reproduced as the antibiotic does not penetrate into the structure, so infected patients often have multiple episodes of infection prospan has been shown that transplantation prospan of a healthy microbiota to a infected patient replacement eliminates the infection of the normal flora in almost 100% of cases
Conclusion, when antibiotics have to be extremely careful and discuss this with the attending prospan physician, often produce dentists usually give antibiotics "prophylactic" that is poorly considered infectious diseases specialist in medicine today. prospan Here I attach a comprehensive article that all these concepts http://cid.oxfordjournals.org/content/46/Supplement_1/S19.full.pdf+html
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