scholarly journals Efficacy and safety of gemifloxacin in the treatment of community-acquired pneumonia: a randomized, double-blind comparison with trovafloxacin

2001 ◽  
Vol 48 (5) ◽  
pp. 735-735 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret R. Hammerschlag
1979 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 224-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Hodgkinson ◽  
Robert W Huff ◽  
Robert H Hayashi ◽  
Farkhanda J Husain

Butorphanol (1 mg and 2 mg) and meperidine (40 mg and 80 mg), given intravenously, were evaluated for analgesic efficacy and safety in a double-blind randomized study employing 200 consenting pre-partum patients in moderate to severe pain during the late first stage of labour. Both drugs provided adequate relief of pain to the mothers. There was no significant difference in the rate of cervical dilation, the foetal heart rate, the Apgar score, pain relief or neonatal neurobehavioural scores between those receiving butorphanol and those receiving meperidine. Twenty-two mothers who received butorphanol and eleven who received meperidine nursed their infants with no adverse effects observed. Side-effects were generally infrequent in this study; however, more side-effects were reported by the patients and observed by the investigator in the meperidine-treated cases (13%) than in the cases treated with butorphanol (2%).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Menghua Sun ◽  
Jian Lyu ◽  
Yi-li Zhang ◽  
Xu Wei ◽  
Li-dan Zhang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Community acquired pneumonia (CAP) in children is one of the common clinical diseases and infectious diseases threatening the health of the population. CAP has complicated causes, closely related to region, season, age, and primary disease. It is the most common cause of children being hospitalized and the first cause of death for children under 5 years old. At present, the clinical treatment is mainly antibiotics, but abuse and non-standard combination of antibiotics have led to increasing antibiotic resistance. Anerning Granules have the functions of clearing away heat and removing wind, reducing phlegm and relieving cough, and improving cough symptoms and lung signs. Thus, this study aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Anerning Granules (AEN) in the treatment of community-acquired pneumonia in children, and to explore whether AEN can reduce the use of antibiotics and have a good effect on the clinical treatment of CAP.Methods and analysis: this study, a randomized, double-blind, single-dummy, parallel control of placebo, multicenter clinical study will be established in 7 hospitals in the same period. A total of 216 patients with community-acquired pneumonia will be randomly allocated at a ratio of 2:1 to two groups: experimental group, control group. The experimental group receives Anerning Granules plus ceftriaxone sodium; the control group receives AEN placebo plus ceftriaxone sodium. Each group will be treated for ten days, and a stage effect evaluation will be conducted on the sixth day. The primary outcome is the end of antibiotics in frequency (DDDs) and effective rate. Secondary outcome measures of effectiveness are the full fever time, sore throat onset time, and safety assessment. Outcomes will be assessed at baseline and after treatment. In addition, adverse events will be monitored throughout the trial process and must be traced to be resolved.Discussion: This study protocol will provide the research data regarding the efficacy and safety of AEN for the treatment of community-acquired pneumonia in children. The first aim is to determine whether Anerning Granules can reduce the use of antibiotics; the second aim is to evaluate the effectiveness of Anerning Granules combined with ceftriaxone sodium in the treatment of children with community-acquired pneumonia. The third aim is to observe the safety of clinical application of Anerning Granules. The results of this study will improve the rational use of drugs, especially the rational application of antibiotics. It will also enable safety evaluation from laboratory indices of adverse events, which will provide reliable evidence for clinical treatment.Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT03675178, registered on 16 September 2018.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document