Affiliations 

  • 1 Department of General Medicine Government Medical College, Omandurar Chennai India
  • 2 Internal Medicine Sri Padmavathi Medical College, SVIMS Tirupati India
  • 3 Department of Internal Medicine Malla Reddy Institute of Medical Sciences Hyderabad India
  • 4 Chamberlain University College of Health Professions Chicago Illinois USA
  • 5 Internal Medicine Malla Reddy Institute of Medical Sciences Hyderabad Telangana India
  • 6 Internal Medicine Jinnah Sindh Medical University Karachi City Sindh Pakistan
  • 7 College of Medicine MAHSA university Kaulalampur Malaysia
  • 8 Internal Medicine Pramukh Swami Medical College Valsad India
  • 9 Crimean Federal University Simferopol Russia
  • 10 Medical Education Mount Vista Medical Centre PHOENIX Arizona USA
  • 11 Department of Cardiology University of Illinois Chicago Illinois USA
  • 12 Ebonyi State University Abakaliki Nigeria
  • 13 Texila American University Georgetown Guyana
Clin Case Rep, 2023 Dec;11(12):e8186.
PMID: 38033693 DOI: 10.1002/ccr3.8186

Abstract

Drug-induced acute pancreatitis is a potentially ignored diagnosis that must be precisely valued. Drug-induced acute pancreatitis can be considered the third common cause of acute pancreatitis after ruling out alcohol and gallstones. Levofloxacin belongs to a class of fluoroquinolone antibiotics used for treating various infections. Besides photosensitivity and liver toxicity, levofloxacin can induce acute pancreatitis, although rarely described. We highlight a case of acute pancreatitis in a female induced by levofloxacin. She presented with typical signs and symptoms of acute pancreatitis and had been taking levofloxacin for urinary tract infections for the last 3 days. After ruling out all other possible causes, her clinical picture, laboratory results, and imaging findings confirmed acute pancreatitis induced by levofloxacin.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.