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Use and Dosing

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Empirical treatment for presumed fungal infection

Cryptococcal meningitis in HIV infected patients

Systemic fungal infections

Visceral leishmaniasis

Notes:

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Empirical treatment for presumed fungal infection

>1 month

Cryptococcal meningitis in HIV infected patients

>1 month

Systemic fungal infections

>1 month

Visceral leishmaniasis

>1 month

Notes:

[Outline]

Indications

Contraindications

Black Box Warnings

Dosing Adjustment

Renal Dose Adjustment

Hepatic Dose Adjustment

Warnings/Precautions

Cautions: Use cautiously in

Pregnancy/Breast Feeding

Pregnancy Category:B

Breastfeeding: No information is available regarding excretion of amphotericin B in breast milk. Amphotericin B is highly protein bound, has a large molecular weight, and is not absorbed orally; therefore, it is considered acceptable to use in nursing mothers by most reviewers. This information is based upon LactMed database (available at http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov/cgi-bin/sis/htmlgen?LACT last accessed 01 July 2011). As per manufacturer's data, because of the potential for serious adverse reactions in nursing infants, a decision should be made whether to discontinue nursing or to discontinue the drug, analyzing the importance of the drug to the mother.

Adverse Reactions

Clinical Pharmacology

Brands and Availability

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US Trade Name(s)

US Availability

AmBisome

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Canadian Trade Name(s)

Canadian Availability

AmBisome

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UK Trade Name(s)

UK Availability

AmBisome

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Australian Trade Name(s)

Australian Availability

AmBisome


[Outline]

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Classification

Antimicrobials

Antifungals (Systemic)
Polyenes

Infectious Disease

Antifungals (Systemic)
Polyenes