Publication | Open Access
Penetration of teicoplanin into heart valves and subcutaneous and muscle tissues of patients undergoing open-heart surgery
11
Citations
10
References
1997
Year
Heart FailureCardiothoracic SurgeryOpen-heart SurgeryCardiovascular DiseaseCardiac AnaesthesiaMedicineValve DiseaseMuscle TissuesSurgeryWound HealingValvular Heart DiseasePublic HealthPharmacologyHeart ValvesCardiologyAnesthesiologyCardiac Valvular Tissue
Penetration of teicoplanin into serum, heart valves, and subcutaneous and muscle tissues was determined in 22 patients undergoing open-heart surgery. Each patient received 12 mg of teicoplanin per kg of body weight as a 30-min intravenous infusion preoperatively. Within 10 h, serum concentrations of teicoplanin declined from 43.1 to 2.8 microg/ml. Teicoplanin concentrations in subcutaneous tissues reached their peak of 9.2 microg/g after 2 to 3 h and decreased slowly to 2.3 microg/g after 9 to 10 h. Concentrations in muscle decreased from 8.7 microg/g to nondetectable levels. Teicoplanin concentrations in cardiac valvular tissue reached their peak of 6.1 microg/g and decreased thereafter to 1.7 microg/g. Teicoplanin concentrations in heart valves were high enough to inhibit methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus and coagulase-negative staphylococci, which are known to cause postoperative wound infections and infective endocarditis.
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