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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, February 2000, p. 261-266, Vol. 44, No. 2
Institute of Anatomy,1
Institute of Clinical Pharmacology and
Toxicology,2 and Institute of Molecular
Biology and Biochemistry,3 Benjamin Franklin
Medical Center, Freie Universität Berlin, 14195 Berlin, Germany
Received 21 December 1998/Returned for modification 25 July
1999/Accepted 29 October 1999
Fluoroquinolones can cause tendinitis and tendon rupture. However,
toxicological as well as clinical information on quinolone-induced tendopathy is scarce. We performed extensive electron microscopic studies with Achilles tendon specimens from ofloxacin-treated rats. The
drug was given at a dose of 1,200 mg/kg (body weight) orally. Juvenile
Wistar rats received one or three oral doses each of 1,200 mg of
ofloxacin/kg (body weight)/day. Three days after treatment, the
tenocytes of their Achilles tendons showed degenerative alterations,
such as multiple vacuoles and vesicles in the cytoplasm that had
developed due to swellings and dilatations of cell organelles. Other
indications of cell degradation were the occurrence of cell debris and
cell detachment from the extracellular matrix accompanied by a loss of
cell-matrix interaction. The tenocytes of juvenile Wistar rats that had
been treated at day 36 with a single oral dose of 1,200 mg of
ofloxacin/kg (body weight) and sacrificed either 3 or 6 months later
exhibited similar degenerative alterations. The number of degenerative
alterations of tenocytes after ofloxacin treatment was considerably
higher in rats that had received a magnesium-deficient diet than in
rats with normal magnesium status. Of the adult rats that had been
treated once, 5 times, and 10 times with ofloxacin and killed 1 day
later, only those with the 10-times treatment showed a significantly
increased number of degeneratively altered tenocytes. In summary,
effects observed in tendons show similar pathological features as
described earlier in cartilage, indicating that quinolone-induced
arthropathy and quinolone-induced tendopathy probably are different
clinical manifestations of the same toxic effect on cellular components of connective tissue structures.
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Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Ultrastructure of Achilles Tendons of Rats Treated with
Ofloxacin and Fed a Normal or Magnesium-Deficient Diet
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute of
Clinical Pharmacology and Toxicology, Freie Universität Berlin,
Garystr. 5, 14195 Berlin, Germany. Phone: 49-30-8445-1770. Fax:
49-30-8445-1763. E-mail: stahl{at}medizin.fu-berlin.de.
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