Guest guest Posted August 20, 2005 Report Share Posted August 20, 2005 Good job, Lynn. I haven't been to that site for a while. It does have a great break down of all the various bugs and classes of bugs, and the drugs that " generally " are thought to be effective against them. I find this statement interesting: " Penicillin administration has been associated with the emergence of BLPB in the oropharynx. Two studies[18,19] demonstrated the rapid emergence of BLPB (beta-lactamase-producing bacilli) following penicillin therapy. BLPB were isolated in 14% of children prior to penicillin therapy, and in 48% following a course of 7 days of oral penicillin therapy. Three months later, 25% of patients were still colonized by resistant bacteria.[18] These organisms were also isolated from household contacts of children repeatedly treated with penicillin, suggesting possible transfer within a family.[19] " ------------- It's been assumed until recently that penicillin was no longer an effective drug, but lately, it's once again becoming the drug of choice according to a number of researchers. According to a local Infectious Disease doc, the dosage and duration of penicillin treatment is very important. He says that too low a dose and you're making things worse. Stratton/Wheldon are using Penicillin for up to a year, or something like that, aren't they? In the above studies, 14% of patients entered the treatment with BLBP (bacterial resistance). After 7 days of treatment there was a substantial increase (48%) of patients showing BLBP, but after 3 months, the resistant BLBP had decreased back down to 25% of patients. I wonder what the dosages were, and what would have happened with larger amounts of drug? Also, what would have happened if people continued with the penicillin past 3 months? Things are never exactly as they seem when it comes to treating these bugs, so assuming things as we often do is probably a bad idea. :-) penny bunnylyz@a... wrote: > Hi, > found a good dental link if anyone's interested. It lists all the possible > infections with the medications and all kinds of toxicity tests, etc. > _www.altcorp.com/AffinityLaboratory/dentalinfections.htm_ > (http://www.altcorp.com/AffinityLaboratory/dentalinfections.htm) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.