Fluoroquinolone (FQ) antibacterials have drawn heightened attention from various international regulatory agencies due to their class-specific side effects. Levonadifloxacin is a novel broad spectrum benzoquinolizine FQ active against methicillin-resistant Staphyloccocus aureus (MRSA). Owing to FQ-associated safety concerns, extensive preclinical safety pharmacology (central nervous system and cardiac safety) and toxicology studies (subacute repeat-dose toxicity, genotoxicity, phototoxicity and chondrotoxicity) of levonadifloxacin were performed at relatively high doses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackgrounds: The investigation of wound healing potential of human GFC (growth factor concentrate) was undertaken in diabetic and non-diabetic rats. Primarily, GFC is the combination of several growth factors present in blood which has potential of wound healing. In present study, WCK-GFC kit, a single step optimized kit was used for obtaining human GFC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKetolide antibiotics are known to cause hepatic injury. Nafithromycin, a novel lactone ketolide was therefore assessed for hepatic safety through range of preclinical in vitro (metabolic stability, CYP inhibition/induction assays) and in vivo (mass balance and repeat dose toxicity) studies. Repeat-dose toxicity studies in rat and dog revealed that nafithromycin did not cause adverse hematological, biochemical and histopathological changes suggestive of systemic or hepatobiliary safety concern at exposures 3-8 fold higher than targeted therapeutic exposures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLevonadifloxacin and its prodrug alalevonadifloxacin are novel broad-spectrum anti-MRSA agents belonging to the benzoquinolizine subclass of quinolone, formulated for intravenous and oral administration, respectively. Various in vitro and in vivo studies have established their antimicrobial spectrum against clinically significant Gram-positive, Gram-negative, atypical, and anaerobic pathogens. The potent activity of levonadifloxacin against MRSA, quinolone-resistant , and hetero-vancomycin-intermediate strains is an outcome of its well-differentiated mechanism of action involving preferential targeting to DNA gyrase.
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