1941
DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(00)72122-2
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Further Observations on Penicillin

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Cited by 726 publications
(265 citation statements)
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References 14 publications
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“…The results of our experiments in which single intramuscular injections of the antibacterial were administered to dogs are in good agreement with those of Chisholm et al (1968) and Verwey & Williams (1962a, b) and indicate that penicillins, even those which are highly bound to plasma proteins, penetrate well into extravascular spaces. This observation is supported by other workers (Abraham, Chain, Fletcher, Florey, Gardner, Heatley & Jennings, 1941;Brown, 1964;Florey, Turton & Duthie, 1946;Jawetz, 1946;McCune, 1960;Nathanson & Liebhold, 1946;Ungar, 1950;Weinstein, Daikos & Perrin, 1951;Werner, Knight, McDermott, Adams & Dubois, 1954;White, Lee & Alverson, 1946). Our experiments therefore indicate that penicillins penetrate readily from plasma to extravascular fluids as represented by peripheral lymph, thereby achieving good antibacterial concentrations of the free active penicillins in the tissues.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…The results of our experiments in which single intramuscular injections of the antibacterial were administered to dogs are in good agreement with those of Chisholm et al (1968) and Verwey & Williams (1962a, b) and indicate that penicillins, even those which are highly bound to plasma proteins, penetrate well into extravascular spaces. This observation is supported by other workers (Abraham, Chain, Fletcher, Florey, Gardner, Heatley & Jennings, 1941;Brown, 1964;Florey, Turton & Duthie, 1946;Jawetz, 1946;McCune, 1960;Nathanson & Liebhold, 1946;Ungar, 1950;Weinstein, Daikos & Perrin, 1951;Werner, Knight, McDermott, Adams & Dubois, 1954;White, Lee & Alverson, 1946). Our experiments therefore indicate that penicillins penetrate readily from plasma to extravascular fluids as represented by peripheral lymph, thereby achieving good antibacterial concentrations of the free active penicillins in the tissues.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…faecalis ST, is comparatively resistant. Penicillin does not affect the respiration of washed suspensions of susceptible staphylococci and was consequently thought to be bacteriostatic (Abraham, Chain, Fletcher, Florey, Gardner, Heatley & Jennings, 1941) but later work demonstrated that penicillin is bactericidal when i t is allowed to act on cells which are growing or in a condition where multiplication is possible (Hobby, Meyer & Chaffee, 1942). Gardner (1940) found that bacteria will increase in size in the presence of penicillin but do not divide, with the result that enlarged and abnormal cells are produced.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is of interest that Abraham et al (29) concluded from their early and now classical experiments with penicillin that the presence of pus does not interfere with the antimicrobial action of the antibiotic. This conclusion was based upon experiments designed to detect the presence of possible antipenicillin factors in pus.…”
Section: (B) Effect Of Penicillin Inmentioning
confidence: 99%