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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 85-B, Issue SUPP_II | Pages 170 - 170
1 Feb 2003
Tai C Want S Quraishi N Batten J Kalra M Hughes S
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Antibiotics are frequently administered prophylactically in spinal procedures to reduce the risk of disc space infection. There is still controversy, however, over which antibiotics are able to penetrate the intervertebral disc effectively and whether the charges on the antibiotics are important in determining their ability to diffuse into the negatively charged intervertebral disc.

In a prospective randomised double blind clinical study, we examined the penetration of two commonly used antibiotics, cefuroxime (negatively charged) and gentamicin (positively charged), into the intervertebral discs. Twenty patients, randomised into two separate groups, received either 1.5g cefuroxime or 5 mg/kg gentamicin prophylactically two hours before their intervertebral discs removed. A blood specimen, from which serum antibiotic levels were determined, was obtained simultaneously with each discectomy.

Clinical therapeutic levels of antibiotic were detectable in the intervertebral discs of all the ten patients who received gentamicin. Only two of the ten patients (20%) who received cefuroxime had quantifiable level of antibiotic in their discs even though serum levels of cefuroxime were at therapeutic levels in all ten patients. Our results showed that cefuroxime does not diffuse into human intervertebral discs as readily as gentamicin and suggest that the charge due to ionisable groups on the antibiotics is important in determining the penetration of antibiotics. We therefore recommend the use of gentamicin in a single prophylactic dose for all spinal procedures to reduce the incidence of post-operative discitis.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 84-B, Issue 7 | Pages 1036 - 1039
1 Sep 2002
Tai CC Want S Quraishi NA Batten J Kalra M Hughes SPF

Antibiotics are often administrated prophylactically in spinal procedures to reduce the risk of infection of the disc space. It is still not known which antibiotics are able to penetrate the intervertebral disc effectively. In a prospective, randomised, double-blind clinical study, we examined the penetration of the intervertebral discs of two commonly used antibiotics, cefuroxime and gentamicin. The patients, randomised into two groups, received either 1.5 g of cefuroxime or 5 mg/kg of gentamicin prophylactically two hours before their intervertebral discs were removed. A specimen of blood, from which serum antibiotic levels were determined, was obtained at the time of discectomy.

Therapeutic levels of antibiotic were detectable in the intervertebral discs of the ten patients who received gentamicin. Only two of the ten patients (20%) who received cefuroxime had a quantifiable level of antibiotic in their discs although therapeutic serum levels of cefuroxime were found in all ten patients. Our results show that cefuroxime does not diffuse into human intervertebral discs as readily as gentamicin. It is possible that the charge due to ionisable groups on the antibiotics can influence the penetration of the antibiotics. We therefore recommend the use of gentamicin in a single prophylactic dose for all spinal procedures in order to reduce the risk of discitis.