Spiller R C, Higgins B E, Frost P G, Silk D B
Clin Sci (Lond). 1984 Jul;67(1):117-20. doi: 10.1042/cs0670117.
A steady-state perfusion technique has been used in vivo in normal subjects to show that at concentrations occurring during therapeutic use (500 mg/1, 1.1 mmol/l) the antibiotic clindamycin reversibly inhibits bicarbonate-stimulated water and electrolyte absorption from the human jejunum. Lactose-stimulated water and electrolyte absorption was not affected by the addition of clindamycin at the same concentration. Clindamycin-induced malabsorption of water and electrolytes may contribute significantly to the diarrhoea that occurs during clindamycin therapy in the absence of pseudomembranous colitis.