The pharmacokinetics of sisomicin administered intramuscularly to rats in daily doses of 12.5 and 25 mg/kg for 30 days was studied. After a single administration of the drug in the above doses the highest and the lowest levels of sisomicin were observed in the kidney cortical layer and liver, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA modification of the microbiological agar-diffusion method for rapid determination of gentamicin, sisomycin and kanamycin levels in the blood serum of patients is described. The decrease in the time for determination of the antibiotic levels in the serum specimens with the modified method was provided by the use of a higher inoculation dose of the test microbe, higher levels of the incubation temperature and an enriched nutrient medium. The assay time was decreased from 18 to 3--4 hours as compared to the routine agar-diffusion method.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe pharmacokinetics of sisomicin was studied on Wistar rats. The antibiotic was used in single or repeated doses of 12.5 and 25 mg/kg.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of Actinomyces rimosus RNAase on the variolovaccine virus was studied. The inhibitory effect of the Actinomyces rimosus RNAase on the variolovaccine virus reproduction in the tissue culture cells was shown. In the experiments with the use of chick embryons and rabbits this effect was less pronounced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of antibiotic 6734-21 on the viruses of variolovaccine, Herpes simplex, influenza and classical avian plague was studied on various experimental models. Antibiotic 6734-21 inhibited development of the variolovaccine virus in the tissue culture, in chick embryos, in rabbits with variolovaccine infection, as well as the development of the viruses of Herpes simplex, Aueski, and Newcastle diseases in the tissue culture. It had a virulicidic effect on the viruses of variolovaccine, influenza and classical avian plague.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of 9 analogues of distamycin A was studied in a tissue culture with respect to the virus of a smallpox vaccine and classical avian plague. Three analogues of distamycin A (I, VI, VII) were studied in chick embryos with respect to the smallpox and influenza viruses. The analogues were characterized by a loss or decrease of the activity against the smallpox vaccine virus as compared to distamycin A.
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