Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002874 (aplastic anemia)
5,905 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We reported five cases of listeriosis (sepsis and meningitis) in the elderly in our hospital during the last 4 years, where no cases of listeriosis had been found. These 5 cases had diabetes mellitus, lung cancer, chronic respiratory failure, gastric ulcer and aplastic anemia respectively as their underlying diseases. At the onset of listeriosis, 3 cases received corticosteroid and 3 cases received H2-blocker. 2 patients were cured and 3 patients died. Three autopsy cases had meningitis or meningoencephalitis and 2 cases of these autopsy cases had granulomatous changes in these spleens. In serotypes of Listeria monocytogenes (L. monocytogenes), 4 cases were 4b and 1 cases was 1b. All 5 strains were resistant to 3rd generation cephems. Wide uses of 3rd generation cephems and H2-blocker may be one of the reasons for the recent increase of listeriosis. Ingestion of contaminated food is the pathogenetic mechanism for initiating L. monocytogenes infections. And following the change of eating habits and the increase of imported foods, food-born listeriosis may increase. We suppose the increase of L. monocytogenes infections and must give attention to L. monocytogenes infections.
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PMID:[Five cases of listeriosis in the elderly]. 198 Oct 72

We have retrospectively evaluated 24 sepsis episodes caused by viridans streptococci in 23 neutropenic children during a 21 months period at the Pediatric Hematology Unit of St. Louis Hospital. The underlying malignancies included acute lymphoblastic leukemia, acute non lymphoblastic leukemia, aplastic anemia and solid tumor. In 17 children neutropenia, defined as a neutrophil count of less than 500 per cubic millimeter, was caused by cytotoxic chemotherapy. For 6 other children neutropenia was consequential to pretransplant treatment regimen for autologous bone marrow transplantation including cytotoxic chemotherapy and total body irradiation. All patients had a silicone rubber atrial catheter. In 9 patients sepsis was associated only with fever for less than 48 hours. In 5 other children fever was prolonged more than 72 hours in spite of specific antimicrobial therapy. No other organism was isolated. In 10 patients, however, the infectious syndrome was severe and the features included cardiac failure (7 patients), pneumonia (7 patients) resembling adult respiratory distress syndrome, encephalopathy (3 patients) without meningitis and proteinuria, 7 of these patients needed a management in a pediatric intensive care unit and 2 died in spite of adapted antibiotics. Streptococci were isolated in blood cultures in 23 children.
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PMID:[Frequency and severity of systemic infections caused by Streptococcus mitis and sanguis II in neutropenic children]. 278 Jan 2

The criteria of the cerebrovascular Moyamoya disease is defined by the characteristic findings of its cerebral angiograms, as follows; 1) The internal carotid siphon is narrowed or obstructed bilaterally. 2) The "Moyamoya vessels" are observed at the base of the brain or the basal ganglionic regions. 3) Main trunks of the cerebral arteries such as the anterior, the middle, and/or the posterior cerebral arteries are often not or poorly visualized. 4) Its etiology is unknown. It has been known that the occlusion of the internal carotid fork with Moyamoya vessels is not infrequently seen in patients with tuberculous meningitis, sickle cell anemia, head trauma, and so on. In the definition of the disease, patients with known etiology and/or unilateral occlusion in the carotid fork must be excluded. However, the cases who cannot fulfil its criteria of the cerebrovascular Moyamoya disease, but have its characteristic Moyamoya vessels and collateral pathways have been reported. We investigated the findings of cerebral computed tomograms in 13 patients who did not fulfil the criteria of the cerebrovascular Moyamoya disease, but revealed the Moyamoya vessels. The subjects are 5 males and 8 females, ranging 15 to 70 years old. The past histories of 9 patients among them revealed hypertension, radiation therapy for pituitary adenoma, head trauma, aplastic anemia, and the Raynaud phenomenon. By angiographic evaluations, occlusions in the unilateral carotid forks were seen in 7 patients, and stenoses in those were in 5 patients. One patient showed only a severe stenosis in the horizontal portion of the middle cerebral artery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Cases similar to cerebrovascular moyamoya disease--investigation by angiography and computed tomography]. 319 93

Ampicillin and chloramphenicol have been used for initial empiric therapy of childhood meningitis since the mid-1970s. Problems associated with these drugs include the possibility of chloramphenicol-associated aplastic anemia and the existence of Hemophilus influenzae type b resistance to both ampicillin and chloramphenicol. Several second- and third-generation cephalosporins have been shown to be as effective as ampicillin and chloramphenicol in the treatment of childhood meningitis.
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PMID:Cephalosporin therapy for childhood meningitis. 349 53

Two strains of Flavobacterium meningosepticum isolated from cases of meningitis are described. One was isolated in Botswana from a man with an aplastic anaemia, the other in the UK from an infant who was probably infected in Bangladesh. The severity of the infection, the characterization of the organism, and the possibility that infection may be found in the UK are discussed.
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PMID:Flavobacterium meningosepticum from cases of meningitis in Botswana and England. 480 Apr 68

We reviewed the causes of death of 55 granulocytopenic patients who received empiric antibiotic treatment for fever according to an EORTC cooperative protocol; 53 presented cancer and 2 aplastic anemia. Among the 55 patients, 19 (35%) deaths were attributed to infection: 16 to bacterial and 3 to fungal infections. Among the patients with bacterial infections, 12 died from septic shock, 3 from pneumonia and 1 from Pseudomonas aeruginosa meningitis. The most frequent non-infectious causes of death were the cancer progression (18%) and hemorrhagic complications (27%), most often cerebromeningeal in relationship to thrombocytopenia. A large number of the patients who died from infection (78%) and hemorrhage (74%) had advanced cancer with poor chances to respond to anticancer therapy.
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PMID:Causes of death in febrile granulocytopenic cancer patients receiving empiric antibiotic therapy. 653 16

Our experience at the Ramathibodi Hospital with 20 infants and children who had Aeromonas septicemia is reviewed. Their ages were from 1 day to 14 years. Eighteen patients had underlying diseases: leukemia, 5; aplastic anemia, 4; cirrhosis, 2; thalassemia/hemoglobinopathy, 3; renal failure, 1; ileal perforation, 1; marasmus, 1; and cavernous hemangioma with thrombocytopenia, 1. Blood cultures yielded Aeromonas hydrophila in all patients, and four patients had polymicrobial bacteremia. Fifteen episodes of septicemia were community-acquired and five were hospital-acquired. The clinical manifestations of these patients were similar to septicemia due to other Gram-negative enteric bacilli. Two patients each had ecthyma gangrenosum, necrotizing fasciitis and meningitis. Antibiotic treatment included penicillins, cephalosporins, aminoglycosides and sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim. The overall case fatality rate was 50%; eight of the nine patients with acute leukemia or aplastic anemia died. With the exception of one child the blood cultures were sterile in all patients before death. Aeromonas septicemia is an uncommon but severe infection which occurs predominantly in compromised hosts.
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PMID:Aeromonas septicemia in infants and children. 672 2

Human beings are frequently exposed to Listeria monocytogenes, but these microorganisms are rarely pathogenic for healthy subjects. In recent years an increase in the frequency of listeriosis has been reported, especially in patients with severe underlying diseases. In the present work the clinical, microbiological, therapeutic and prognostic characteristics of seven adult cases of listeriosis are reviewed. L. monocytogenes was isolated from blood, cerebrospinal fluid or both. Most patients had an underlying illness (one alcoholic, one diabetic, one lymphoma, and two aplastic anemia), and three of them had received immunosuppressive treatment. The disease can have different clinical presentations; the commonest forms were septicemia and acute meningitis. All patients with an underlying disease succumbed to listeriosis. A comment is made on the possibility of confusion between L. monocytogenes and other germs, and some aspects of the epidemiology of listeriosis are analyzed.
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PMID:[Listeriosis in the adult: report of 7 cases]. 678 95

Chloramphenicol was introduced into medical practice in 1949. At therapeutic concentrations of 10 to 20 micrograms drug per ml, the drug inhibits bacterial ribosomal and, to a lesser extent, mammalian mitochondrial protein synthesis but concentrations above 60 micrograms drug per ml induce progressive reduction of oxygen-dependent cellular metabolism. Some adverse reactions (e.g. bone marrow suppression and the "gray baby syndrome") reflect these effects. The pathogenesis of chloramphenicol-induced aplastic anemia remains unclear. Chloramphenicol is most bioavailable after oral administration and has a remarkable ability to diffuse into body fluids and tissues. However, there are wide interindividual variations in its metabolism and elimination, particularly in newborns. Chloramphenicol is indicated for invasive ampicillin-resistant H. influenzae infections; for patients allergic to penicillin with pneumococcal, meningococcal or H. influenzae meningitis; in patients under 8 years of age with Rocky Mountain spotted fever; and for the treatment of brain abscess and other severe anaerobic infections (excluding endocarditis) due to B. fragilis. Other indications include selected patients with Salmonella meningitis or carditis, rickettsioses and intraocular infections. Unravelling the pathogenesis of chloramphenicol-induced aplastic anemia is critical to more widespread application of this remarkable antimicrobial.
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PMID:Chloramphenicol: properties and clinical use. 717 17

Following an unrelated-donor bone marrow transplant a six-year-old child with severe aplastic anaemia developed Listeria monocytogenes septicaemia and meningitis. Cook-chill foods consumed during his stay in hospital were found to contain strains of L. monocytogenes and other Listeria species. Whole cell protein SDS-PAGE was performed on all isolates. No food isolates were found that were identical to the patient's strain by this technique or by serotyping. The usefulness of whole cell protein SDS electrophoresis for listeria strain differentiation is discussed.
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PMID:An epidemiological study of listeriosis complicating a bone marrow transplant. 809 29


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