Poor Central Nervous System Penetration of Tigecycline in a Patient with Sepsis and Ventriculitis Caused by Multidrug-Resistant Klebsiella Pneumoniae:

2007 
Objective:To report the use of tigecycline in a case of ventriculitis and concurrent bacteremia.Case Summary:A 57-year-old African American male with a ruptured brain aneurysm was admitted to the intensive care unit after surgical intervention and external ventricular drainage placement. His hospital course was complicated by myocardial infarction, ventilator-associated pneumonia, ventriculitis, and sepsis, with multidrug-resistant (MDR) Klebsiella pneumoniae isolated from multiple sites, including blood and cerebral spinal fluid (CSF). The patient was treated with high doses of intravenous tigecycline and gentamicin along with intrathecal gentamicin. This combination eradicated infections outside the central nervous system (CNS) within 48 hours, but it took approximately 8 days for the CSF culture to become negative. Timed serum and CSF fluid samples were collected to determine CSF penetration of tigecycline on day 12 of therapy. CSF concentrations obtained 30 minutes after the dose and at the end of the...
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