To the Editor: The development of resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis after empirical monotherapy could limit the role of fluoroquinolones in the treatment of tuberculosis. A 36-year-old man with AIDS (CD4+ lymphocyte count, 40 per cubic millimeter) presented with weight loss, flank pain, fevers, and dysuria. Examination revealed prostatic nodules, and computed tomography revealed abscesses. He received six days of levofloxacin therapy for prostatitis; ethambutol and clarithromycin were added for possible M. avium complex infection. There was no clinical improvement. He then received ciprofloxacin alone for seven days and afterward underwent transurethral prostatic resection; acid-fast smears were positive. A urine culture . . .
CITATION STYLE
Ginsburg, A. S., Woolwine, S. C., Hooper, N., Benjamin, W. H., Bishai, W. R., Dorman, S. E., & Sterling, T. R. (2003). The Rapid Development of Fluoroquinolone Resistance in M. tuberculosis. New England Journal of Medicine, 349(20), 1977–1978. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm200311133492023
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.