by V Zanichelli Cited by 1anaerobic coverage when anaerobs are a consideration (e.g. abscesses). meropenem as another alternative if even broader gram-negative coverage is needed.
Generally avoid adding it to piperacillin-tazobactam or meropenem (these agents have great anaerobic coverage; the only thing that metronidazole
I'm looking for an anaerobic coverage in a baby with meropenem. Found it incompatiblein some references. Is this about the inyection
Meropenem. Meropenem is used for infections such as Anaerobic bacteria are a type of bacteria that can survive without oxygen.
Lacks activity against Stenotrophomonas maltophilia. Anaerobic coverage: Excellent (but doesn't cover C. difficile). spectrum: ertapenem. Main differences compared to meropenem: 1) Lacks coverage of pseudomonas and acinetobacter. 2) Limited activity against enterococci. use of carbapenems in general
anaerobic bacteria. Clinicians depend heavily on information from the Remove the meropenem disk from each TSB-meropenem disk suspension using a 10
Generally avoid adding it to piperacillin-tazobactam or meropenem (these agents have great anaerobic coverage; the only thing that metronidazole
Fluoroquinolones - Ciprofloxacin (~70% coverage) Levofloxacin (~65%), NOT ANTIBIOTICS WITH ANAEROBE COVERAGE. Infections in which anaerobes are
meropenem) have anaerobic cover so metronidazole is not needed. Temocillin aztreonam have no anaerobic or gram positive cover. Carbapenem - resistant
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