Back to Search
Start Over
Chemotherapy for the systemic mycoses: the prelude to ketoconazole.
- Source :
-
Reviews of infectious diseases [Rev Infect Dis] 1980 Jul-Aug; Vol. 2 (4), pp. 625-32. - Publication Year :
- 1980
-
Abstract
- Successful chemotherapy of the systemic mycoses now covers a span of more than 75 years and dates to the first reported use of potassium iodide for treatment of sporotrichosis. The second drug with efficacy was stilbamidine, and its currently available successor, hydroxystilbamidine isethionate, still has a role in therapy of some patients with nonprogressive blastomycosis of the skin. The introduction in 1957 of amphotericin B marked the first time there was an effective agent for such diseases as cryptococcosis, histoplasmosis, candidosis, and with lesser success, for coccidioidomycosis, mucormycosis, and aspergillosis. However, amphotericin B is nephrotoxic, depresses bone marrow (especially erythropoeisis), and, if patients are not monitored and controlled closely, the drug produces hypokalemic muscle weakness and cardiotoxicity. Flucytosine has a narrower spectrum of activity (cryptococcosis, candidosis, cladosporiosis, and chromomycosis) but a preferable route of administration (oral). Newer agents presently available are miconazole and clotrimazole; the latter is for topical use only.
- Subjects :
- Amphotericin B therapeutic use
Animals
Antifungal Agents therapeutic use
Blastomycosis drug therapy
Candida drug effects
Cladosporium drug effects
Coccidioidomycosis drug therapy
Cryptococcosis drug therapy
Flucytosine therapeutic use
Histoplasmosis drug therapy
Humans
Ketoconazole
Mice
Potassium Iodide therapeutic use
Sporotrichosis drug therapy
Stilbamidines therapeutic use
Sulfonamides therapeutic use
Imidazoles therapeutic use
Mycoses drug therapy
Piperazines therapeutic use
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0162-0886
- Volume :
- 2
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Reviews of infectious diseases
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 6255542
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1093/clinids/2.4.625