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  Vol. 97 No. 4, April 1979 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Radioactive and bioassay of intraocular antibiotics: double-assay technique to compare penicillin G, cefamandole, and gentamicin in ocular tissues in vivo

P. Young, M. Barza, A. Kane and J. Baum

We examined the correlation between radioactive assay and trephine-discbioassay of penicillin G sodium, cefamandole nafate, and gentamicin sulfate in ocular tissues of pigmented rabbits after subconjuctival administration of antibiotic. We devised a technique whereby a single sample of tissue could be assayed by both methods. This was achieved by performing the bioassay first, then measuring the resudual radioactivity in the agar and specimens. The results of both methods were generally within 13%. An exception was gentamicin in iris and choroidretina, for which the bioassay result was strikingly less than the radioassay value. No such discrepancy was evident when similar studies were carried out with gentamicin in albino rabbits. This suggests that the phenomenon is due to tight binding of gentamicin by melanin-containing tissues. The trephine-disc bioassay provides an accurate measure of diffusible bioactive antibiotic in ocular tissues.





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