• Graefes Arch. Clin. Exp. Ophthalmol. · Apr 1994

    Comparative Study

    Intravenous cefazolin in penetrating eye injuries. I. Effects of trauma and multiple doses on intraocular delivery.

    • D V Alfaro and P E Liggett.
    • Department of Ophthalmology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut.
    • Graefes Arch. Clin. Exp. Ophthalmol. 1994 Apr 1;232(4):238-41.

    AbstractThe poor intraocular penetration of systemically administered antibiotics has raised questions regarding their usefulness as prophylactic agents in the management of penetrating eye injuries. Cefazolin was administered intravenously to rabbits with penetrating eye injuries to determine the influence of trauma on ocular pharmacokinetics. Following a standardized penetrating eye injury in 27 New Zealand white rabbits, animals were divided into three groups that received either three, six, or nine doses of intravenous cefazolin every 8 h. Cefazolin levels were then measured in the traumatized eye, the non-traumatized (control) fellow eye, and in the serum of each animal. In the three treatment groups vitreous concentrations of cefazolin were significantly higher in traumatized eyes than in the non-injured eyes. After three doses, vitreous concentrations of cefazolin in traumatized eyes averaged 9.1 mg/l; mean concentrations of cefazolin in non-injured eyes were 0.6 mg/l (P < 0.0002). After six doses of intravenous cefazolin, vitreous concentrations in traumatized eyes averaged 7.3 mg/l; cefazolin levels in non-injured eyes were 0.6 mg/l in the non-traumatized eyes (P < 0.0005). After nine doses, vitreous cefazolin concentrations in traumatized eyes averaged 9.7 mg/l, while mean levels in the non-traumatized eyes were all 0.05 mg/l (P < 0.0002). This work suggests that penetrating injuries of the eye alter ocular pharmacokinetics, resulting in high intraocular concentrations of systemically administered cefazolin.

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