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Guidelines for the treatment of dysentery (shigellosis): a systematic review of the evidence.

Phoebe C M WilliamsJames Alexander Berkley
Published in: Paediatrics and international child health (2018)
Current WHO guidelines support the use of fluoroquinolones (first-line), β-lactams (second-line) and cephalosporins (second-line) which accords with currently available evidence and other international guidelines, and there is no strong evidence for changing this guidance. Azithromycin is appropriate as a second-line therapy in regions where the rate of non-susceptibility of ciprofloxacin is known to be high, and research suggests that, from a cardiac point of view, azithromycin is safer than other macrolide antibiotics. Cefixime is also a reasonable alternative, although its use must be weighed against the risk of dissemination of extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing organisms.
Keyphrases
  • clinical practice
  • pseudomonas aeruginosa
  • left ventricular
  • stem cells
  • heart failure
  • multidrug resistant
  • atrial fibrillation