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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Comparative pharmacokinetics of cefoperazone and cefamandole.

The pharmacokinetics of cefoperazone, a new beta-lactam antibiotic, were studied in normal volunteers and compared with the pharmacokinetics of cefamandole. After a 30-min infusion of 2 g of cefoperazone, the mean serum level was 256 micrograms/ml; at 4 h, the serum level was 20 micrograms/ml, and at 24 h, the level was 1.25 micrograms/ml, compared with levels of cefamandole of 188 micrograms/ml at the end of infusion, 1.8 micrograms/ml at 4 h, and none detected thereafter. The mean half-life of cefoperazone was 1.6 h, compared with 0.7 h for cefamandole. The area under the curve was 356 micrograms/ml per h for cefoperazone, which was three times that for cefamandole. The apparent volume of distribution for cefoperazone was 9.9 liters/1.73 m2 compared with 12.5 liters/1.73 m2 for cefamandole. Serum clearance of cefoperazone was 85 ml/min, and renal clearance was 25 ml/min, compared with a serum clearance of 224 ml/min and a renal clearance of 213 ml/min for cefamandole. Urine levels exceeded 25 micrograms/ml in the first 8 h after injection. Renal recovery of cefoperazone was only 29%.[1]

References

  1. Comparative pharmacokinetics of cefoperazone and cefamandole. Srinivasan, S., Francke, E.L., Neu, H.C. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. (1981) [Pubmed]
 
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