Abstract

Aortic valve endocarditis due to a penicillin G (PNC) and ceftizoxime (CZ)-sensitive group B streptococcus (GBS) was induced in 72 rabbits. Animals received either procaine PNC (300 mg/kg per day) or CZ (150 mg/kg/day) for 3, 6, or 9 days. PNC rapidly sterilized blood cultures (less than or equal to 3 days) and significantly reduced vegetation GBS titers versus controls at all three sacrifice times (p less than 0.0005). In contrast, CZ exerted a slow in vivo bactericidal effect with vegetation titers not significantly different from controls until day 9 of therapy. By day 9 of therapy, 65/89 (73%) of vegetations were sterilized by PNC versus only 24/94 (26%) sterilized by CZ (p less than 0.0005). This marked in vitro-in vivo disparity in CZ-treated animals occurred despite 100% of individual serum bactericidal titers greater than or equal to 1:32 and 100% of individual CZ serum levels greater than or equal to 100 times the GBS MBC. The suboptimal CZ in vivo effect was not related to: (1) development of CZ resistance on therapy; (2) CZ inactivation, or (3) inoculum-growth phase effect.

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