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      Acute Delirium Associated With Levofloxacin

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          Abstract

          Delirium is considered as the most common complication afflicting hospitalized elderly patients, accompanied by high morbidity and mortality rate; and despite its high prevalence, it often remains unrecognized. Drug-induced delirium is a well-known entity with sedatives, narcotics and anticholinergics most often implicated in its causation. Delirium attributed to antibiotics, mainly cephalosporins and macrolids, has been infrequently reported, and until yet only seven cases of levofloxacin-induced delirium have been described in the medical literature. We describe another case of delirium associated with levofloxacin in an elderly patient who was hospitalized in our medical ward for pneumonia. The present case and the other cases previously reported should raise the awareness of physicians to this serious, underestimated, and underdiagnosed adverse effect of a commonly used antibiotic, levofloxacin.

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          Most cited references23

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          Delirium in older persons.

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            Delirium in the Elderly

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              Comparative tolerability of the newer fluoroquinolone antibacterials.

              The most common adverse effects of the fluoroquinolones involve the gastrointestinal tract, skin and CNS, and are mainly mild and reversible. Of the gastrointestinal events, nausea and vomiting are the most common. Mild hepatic reactions are a class effect, usually presenting as mild transaminase level increases without clinical symptoms. However, postmarketing surveillance has revealed significant hepatotoxicity with trovafloxacin. It is not currently known whether the severe reactions to trovafloxacin are specific to that agent or simply represent an extreme of an emerging class effect. The enormous worldwide usage of, and extensive published adverse effect data on the other fluoroquinolones and naphthyridones suggests the former. In perspective, rare but serious hepatotoxicity has been reported with other fluoroquinolones and the overall incidence of trovafloxacin hepatotoxicity is not dissimilar to that reported with flucloxacillin and amoxicillin-clavulanic acid. CNS reactions vary in severity and include dizziness, convulsions (notably with lomefloxacin) and psychoses. Fluoroquinolones differ in their pro-convulsive activity, relating to their differing potential as gamma-aminobutyric acid antagonists and binding to the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor. The basis for the increased seizure potential following the coadministration of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs with certain fluoroquinolones is not fully understood. Fluoroquinolone phototoxicity, caused by the generation of toxic free oxygen species under exposure to UVA radiation, is significantly more common with 8-halogenated compounds. Certain patient groups, e.g. patients with cystic fibrosis, are predisposed to this adverse effect. Murine photocarcinogenicity has been demonstrated with lomefloxacin, but no such effects have been reported in humans. Prolongation of the QTc interval is also a class effect, although cardiac arrhythmias have only been linked with sparfloxacin. Among the newer fluoroquinolones, clinically significant cardiac events are rare or absent but possible interactions in patients receiving other drugs capable of causi ng QT prolongation should be anticipated. Tendinitis and rupture, usually of the Achilles tendon, are rare, class-effects of fluoroquinolones, most frequently reported with pefloxacin. Predisposing factors include aging, corticosteroid use, renal disease, haemodialysis and transplantation. Use of fluoroquinolones in paediatric patients remains contentious. However, accruing human data suggest that restrictions on paediatric use imposed because of fluoroquinolone-induced cartilage damage in juvenile animals, may soon be relaxed. Data from over 1700 children in the UK failed to disclose arthropathy and extensive paediatric use of norfloxacin in Japan and ciprofloxacin in developing countries has been free of articular effects.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Clin Med Res
                J Clin Med Res
                Elmer Press
                Journal of Clinical Medicine Research
                Elmer Press
                1918-3003
                1918-3011
                September 2018
                31 July 2018
                : 10
                : 9
                : 725-727
                Affiliations
                [a ]Department of Internal Medicine A, Bnai Zion Medical Center, Faculty of Medicine, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel
                [b ]Infectious Diseases Unit, Bnai Zion Medical Center, Faculty of Medicine, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel
                Author notes
                [c ]Corresponding Author: Majed Odeh, Department of Internal Medicine A, Bnai Zion Medical Center, Golomb Street 47, Haifa 31048, Israel. Email: majed.odeh@ 123456b-zion.org.il
                Article
                10.14740/jocmr3538w
                6089571
                99cd105b-2323-42ee-822d-d176fdadf55f
                Copyright 2018, Kogan et al.

                This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 International License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 10 July 2018
                : 20 July 2018
                Categories
                Case Report

                Medicine
                levofloxacin,quinolone,fluoroquinolone,delirium
                Medicine
                levofloxacin, quinolone, fluoroquinolone, delirium

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