Purpose To determine the characteristics of the patients who preferred using the eye drop guide (EDG) regularly and their opinions toward the guide in order to select the patients for prescribing the EDG appropriately. Patients and Methods Fifty-seven glaucoma patients who completed the primary study, “The effect of ‘eye drop guide’ on the success rate of eye drop self-instillation in glaucoma patients”, were included. Patients’ instillation techniques, routine instillation or using the EDG, were chosen independently. After 4–6 months, they were interviewed about the frequency of EDG use and their rating scores toward the guide in 4 aspects including aiming aids, contamination prevention, reduction of drop waste, and ease of use. The differences in opinion scores between each frequency group and the factors associated with the regularity of EDG use were statistically analyzed. Results Of fifty-seven patients completing the interview, 19.3% used the EDG everyday, while 45.6% had never used the EDG. The nonusers rated significantly lower scores in all aspects (p-value < 0.005). From multivariate analysis, the factors associated with the preference not to use the EDG were administering in supine position (p-value < 0.001, adjusted OR 34.866, 95% CI 4.974–244.412) and more than one eye drop use (p-value = 0.048, adjusted OR 5.280, 95% CI 1.018–27.396). Conclusion The EDG should be selectively prescribed for the particular patients who had one medication and performed instillation in sitting or standing position. Although the regular EDG users tended to have positive opinions on the EDG, their long-term compliance with the guide was underinvestigated.
The pharmacokinetics of benzathine penicillin G (1,200,000 IU given intramuscularly), penicillin V (250 mg given orally twice daily), erythromycin stearate (250 mg given orally twice daily) and roxithromycin (150 mg given orally once daily) were investigated. The drugs were given prophylactically to prevent the recurrence of rheumatic fever to 20 patients attending a rheumatic fever clinic in a study of crossover design. Serum antibiotic concentrations were determined by microbiological assay at intervals of up to 28 days after intramuscular injection and immediately before and 1-2 h after the fifth oral dose. The concentrations of penicillin G in all serum samples obtained on day 28 after parenteral benzathine penicillin G administration were greater than 0.01 mg/dl. Most patients had no detectable penicillin V or erythromycin in blood samples drawn immediately before the fifth dose. The concentration of roxithromycin at 24 h after the dose was greater than 1.2 mg/dl in all patients. Based on the pharmacokinetic profiles, it is suggested that 1,200,000 IU benzathine penicillin G given every 4 weeks is an appropriate regimen for preventing the recurrence of rheumatic fever in Thai adults. Roxithromycin had much better pharmacokinetics than penicillin V and erythromycin stearate, and is probably the best alternative regimen to intramuscular penicillin G.
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