Abstract

A variant that was highly tolerant to benzylpenicillin was obtained from a non-tolerant clinical isolate of Streptococcus sanguis II by repeated exposure to penicillin. The rabbit model of endocarditis was used to investigate the efficacy of a high dose regimen of benzylpenicillin (250 mg/kg; peak serum concentration c. 25 mg/l) in the prophylaxis and treatment of endocarditis during challenge or infection with the non-tolerant parent strain or its tolerant variant. The two strains exhibited a similar capacity to initiate infection. A single dose of penicillin administered 0.5 h before bacterial challenge protected six of nine rabbits infected with the non-tolerant parent strain, but none of nine infected with the tolerant variant. Treatment of established infection with penicillin administered twice daily for four days cured eight of 13 (61%) rabbits infected with the non-tolerant parent strain, but only one of 14 (7%) rabbits infected with the tolerant variant. These results support the view that tolerance to penicillin has therapeutic implications.

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