Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CIPROFLOXACIN IN DEXTROSE 5 versus GATIFLOXACIN.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: CIPROFLOXACIN IN DEXTROSE 5 versus GATIFLOXACIN.
CIPROFLOXACIN IN DEXTROSE 5% vs GATIFLOXACIN
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Ciprofloxacin is a fluoroquinolone antibiotic that inhibits bacterial DNA gyrase (topoisomerase II) and topoisomerase IV, thereby interfering with bacterial DNA replication, transcription, repair, and recombination.
Gatifloxacin inhibits bacterial DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV, enzymes essential for DNA replication, transcription, repair, and recombination.
400 mg IV every 8 hours.
400 mg orally or intravenously once daily
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life 3.5-5 hours in healthy adults, prolonged to 6-10 hours in elderly or mild renal impairment, and up to 12-24 hours in severe renal impairment (CrCl <30 mL/min).
Clinical Note
moderateGatifloxacin + Digoxin
"Gatifloxacin may decrease the cardiotoxic activities of Digoxin."
Clinical Note
moderateGatifloxacin + Digitoxin
"Gatifloxacin may decrease the cardiotoxic activities of Digitoxin."
Clinical Note
moderateGatifloxacin + Deslanoside
"Gatifloxacin may decrease the cardiotoxic activities of Deslanoside."
Clinical Note
moderateGatifloxacin + Acetyldigitoxin
"Gatifloxacin may decrease the cardiotoxic activities of Acetyldigitoxin."
Terminal elimination half-life 7-14 hours (mean ~10 hours in healthy adults); prolonged in renal impairment (up to 40 hours with CrCl <30 mL/min)
Renal excretion accounts for approximately 50-70% of an administered dose as unchanged drug; biliary/fecal excretion accounts for about 20-35% (including active drug and metabolites).
Primarily renal excretion (70-87% unchanged in urine) via glomerular filtration and tubular secretion; ~10% biliary/fecal
Category C
Category C
Fluoroquinolone Antibiotic
Fluoroquinolone Antibiotic