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Old 17th, January 2007, 03:42 PM
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Originally Posted by admin View Post
I once worked for a week where one of the local GP's prescribed amoxicillin QDS and ampicillin TDS.
The difference between ampicillin and amoxicillin is mainly one of licencing - as the patent on qds Penbritin (ampicillin) came too an end the new wonder antibiotic Amoxil was introduced with a tds dosage.

Amoxicillin half life 61.3 minutes
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amoxicillin

Ampicillin half life approx 1 hour
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ampicillin

Jeff
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Old 17th, January 2007, 09:00 PM
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Originally Posted by Jeff View Post
The difference between ampicillin and amoxicillin is mainly one of licencing - as the patent on qds Penbritin (ampicillin) came too an end the new wonder antibiotic Amoxil was introduced with a tds dosage.

Amoxicillin half life 61.3 minutes
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amoxicillin

Ampicillin half life approx 1 hour
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ampicillin

Jeff

But half life is only part of the story, bioavailabilty is also important (95% for amoxicillin against 40% for ampicillin), as is volume of distribution and minimum inhibitory concentration.

Surely the licencing wouldn't be different unless there was a good reason for it, and given that amoxicillin is effective at a tds dose, why give it qds?
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Old 17th, January 2007, 09:18 PM
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What about spectrum of activity? Salmonella is more sensitive to amoxicillin than to ampicillin, but it's the other way around for Schigella...
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Old 19th, January 2007, 01:25 AM
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Surely the licencing wouldn't be different unless there was a good reason for it,
The patent on Penbritin was soon to expire and its replacement Amoxil needed to offer an advantage in order to generate sales.

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and given that amoxicillin is effective at a tds dose, why give it qds?
No reason at all, but neither expensive nor dangerous enough to worry about.

Jeff
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