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Query: UMLS:C0003864 (
arthritis
)
69,039
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The three cases reported were diagnosed at the time of contamination by direct examination and culture, at birth, of placental tissue, gastric fluid and peripheral specimens. The culture media included a chocolate agar medium favourable to the growth of H. influenzae. One of the isolates was beta-lactamase producer and therefore resistant to the group A penicillins usually prescribed. Determination of the M.I.C.s of eight antibiotics showed that cefotaxime constitutes, for the time being, a suitable alternative to penicillins against such strains. Early detection of H. influenzae perinatal infections make it possible to treat neonates before complications develop. Among the 19 cases published, there were 4 cases of
meningitis
, 8 cases of septicaemia and 1 case of
arthritis
.
...
PMID:[Haemophilus influenza infections in infants and mothers. Three cases (author's transl)]. 628 Jan 32
From 1973 to 1983 nine cases of Brucella melitensis infection were hospitalised at the Centre hospitalier universitaire vaudois (CHUV), Lausanne. In each case, the infection was acquired in a Mediterranean country (4 cases in Italy, 2 in Spain, 2 in Portugal and 1 in Greece). In 6 of the cases the disease was acquired by ingestion of dairy products and in 2 cases by direct animal contact. Despite classical initial symptomatology (fever, rigors, weakness), the time from first symptoms to diagnosis varied between 10 days and 5 months. This delay probably explains why 6 of 9 patients were admitted because of septic complications: orchi-epididymitis,
arthritis
,
meningitis
and endocarditis. With prolonged antibiotherapy, the evolution was favourable in all cases. The patient who presented with endocarditis required emergency aortic valve replacement. Culture of the valve showed the presence of 10(9) B. melitensis/g of tissue. Cure was achieved by the administration of streptomycin and tetracycline for 6 weeks, followed by cotrimoxazole for one year. These cases show that the diagnosis of Brucella infection is becoming rare in Switzerland. It is often not suspected, and prompt diagnosis is delayed until further complications occur. Serology and blood cultures should be done in every patient presenting with fever after a stay in endemic countries.
...
PMID:[Brucellosis: a varied clinical presentation in 9 patients]. 633 95
Fifty-two children hospitalized in the Pediatric service of a general hospital between January 1978 and December 1979 were found to be infected with Haemophilus influenzae or para-influenzae (43 with H. influenzae and 9 with para-influenzae). Most of these children (34/52) were less than 4 years of age. The localizations of infections were as follow: 5
meningitis
with satisfactory resolution except for 1 who developed slight deafness, 1 epiglotitis, 11 pneumonias or bronchopneumonias, 1
arthritis
, 10 otitis medias, 6 conjunctivitis, 3 sinusitis, 10 upper airway infections and 1 neonatal infection. On 8 of these cases the patients were felt to be carriers of H. influenzae or para-influenzae, the signs and symptoms beeing not related to these bacteria. These results are compared with those found in the literature.
...
PMID:[Haemophilus influenzae and parainfluenzae in children. A retrospective study of 52 cases]. 634 38
During 1980 and 1981, an epidemiological survey (biotyping, serotyping, beta-lactamase production) of Haemophilus strains isolated in our hospital was performed. One hundred sixty-one Haemophilus were isolated among 146 patients: 17 H. parainfluenzae and 144 H. influenzae. Most of the infections occurred in patients, under 3 years old (77%), during cold weather (63%), and in males (55%). Biotypes I, II and III were the most common isolates (88%). Capsulated strains were frequent (53%). A beta-lactamase occurred in 9, 5% of cases. Distribution of serotypes and biotypes will be discussed in relation to clinical findings (
meningitis
: 21, septicemia from other origins: 9,
arthritis
: 2, and other non-systemic infections).
...
PMID:[Haemophilus infections in pediatrics. Characterization of strains by biotype, serotype and the production of beta-lastamase]. 634 40
During a one-year prospective study, the clinical conditions in which Listeria monocytogenes was isolated from nineteen patients (six females, thirteen males) included
meningitis
, meningoencephalitis, spontaneous peritonitis, septicaemia,
arthritis
, pelvic infection and urethritis. All isolates were type 4 serotype. Both apparently well persons and patients with already compromised immune systems were observed. Subtyping of ascitic fluid lymphocytes in one patient with peritonitis showed predominantly T cell subpopulation and no B cells. Most isolates were sensitive to ampicillin, crystalline penicillin and erythromycin. A mortality of 27 per cent was recorded.
...
PMID:Listeria monocytogenes in Northern Nigeria. 640 67
Unusual manifestations of meningococcal infection as pneumonia, pericarditis, endocarditis,
arthritis
, urogenital infections and acute abdominal disease are seen combined with
meningitis
or septicemia, but can also appear alone without systemic disease. Incidence, diagnosis, clinical symptoms and therapy are briefly discussed with documentation from literature.
...
PMID:Unusual manifestations of meningococcal infection. A review. 641 5
Forty-nine patients with disseminated gonococcal infection (DGI) hospitalized at Boston City and University Hospitals over a 7-year period were studied. Patients with clinical manifestations of DGI and with cervical, urethral, rectal, pharyngeal, synovial or blood cultures positive for Neisseria gonorrhoeae were separated into two groups based on the presence or absence of suppurative
arthritis
. There were 19 cases of suppurative
arthritis
(Group II) and 30 cases with only tenosynovitis, skin lesions, or both (Group I). Blood cultures were positive only in Group I patients (43%) and synovial fluid cultures only in Group II patients (47%). Polyarthralgia was the most common initial symptom in both groups of patients. Twenty-six Group I patients had tenosynovitis (87%), while only 4 Group II patients (21%) had tenosynovitis (p less than 0.001). The knee was the most commonly involved suppurated joint. Twenty-seven Group I patients (90%) had skin lesions compared to 8 Group II patients (42%) (p less than 0.001). Some of these lesions progressed on treatment; some patients were unaware of their lesions. Genitourinary symptoms were unusual in both groups of patients. Eleven women (33%) were menstruating or were pregnant at the onset of DGI. Thirteen patients had histories suggestive of previous gonococcal infections; one had recurrent DGI. This patient and one other were found to have complement abnormalities. There were no cases of endocarditis or
meningitis
. Four patients had unexplained liver function abnormalities. All patients recovered uneventfully. Strains isolated from disseminated sites were predominantly of the transparent phenotype (90%). Many strains (58%) required arginine, hypoxanthine and uracil for growth. They were also more susceptible to penicillin than reported strains that cause pelvic inflammatory disease. Most strains were of a single outer membrane protein coagglutination serogroup, WI (85%). These characteristics did not vary between the Group I and Group II isolates. The two groups of strains, however, did vary in their complement-dependent bactericidal reactivity to normal human sera. Eighteen of 24 Group I strains (75%) versus 9 of 19 Group II strains (47%) resisted killing by all normal human sera tested (p less than .05). Likewise, convalescent sera from Group II patients were able to kill their infecting strains more often than did sera from Group I patients (70% vs 17%) (p less than 0.01). Thus, variations in the clinical expression of disease in patients with DGI may be explained, in part, by differences in certain phenotypic and immunologic features of infecting strains.
...
PMID:Disseminated gonococcal infection: a prospective analysis of 49 patients and a review of pathophysiology and immune mechanisms. 641 61
The diagnosis of septic infections of closed body cavities requires a careful search. Traditional laboratory tests such as Gram's stain, white cell count, and protein and glucose levels are often inconclusive. Measurement of lactic acid in cerebrospinal, synovial, pleural, ascitic, and bursal fluids has been utilized to distinguish bacterial from nonbacterial infections. The present review summarizes the current status of lactic acid measurement in the differential diagnosis of
meningitis
,
arthritis
, empyema, bacterial peritonitis, and bursitis.
...
PMID:Clinical utility of lactic acid measurement in body fluids other than plasma. 644 45
Latex particle agglutination for Streptococcus pneumoniae was evaluated in 76 patients. Fifteen of these patients had invasive disease due to S. pneumoniae including 12 with
meningitis
, 2 with occult bacteremia and 1 with suppurative
arthritis
. Five of the patients with
meningitis
also had bacteremia. Pneumococcal antigen was detected in the cerebrospinal fluid of 9 of the 12 patients with
meningitis
(sensitivity 75%). However, antigen was detected in the serum of only two of the six patients with bacteremia (sensitivity 33%) and was detected in the urine of none of five patients with bacteremia (sensitivity 0%). Consequently latex particle agglutination appears to be useful when cerebrospinal fluid is examined in patients with pneumococcal
meningitis
but does not appear to be sufficiently sensitive to warrant its use with serum or urine in patients with invasive disease due to S. pneumoniae. The specificity of the system used here appeared satisfactory, since pneumococcal antigen was not detected in any of the body fluids from the 61 patients without evidence of invasive pneumococcal disease (specificity 100%).
...
PMID:Evaluation of a latex particle agglutination kit in pneumococcal disease. 649 12
During the ten year period 1970 through 1979, pneumococci from 1205 episodes of pneumococcal disease affecting children and adults in Australia were studied. These included 188 cases of bacteremic pneumonia (85% in adults), 103 cases of primary bacteremia (50% adults), 201 cases of
meningitis
(69% children), 13 cases of osteomyelitis and/or
arthritis
, and 13 cases of peritonitis. Otitis media (403 cases), conjunctivitis and sinusitis were predominant amongst 672 localised infections. Of 36 serotypes of pneumococci met with, the leading types were 19, 14, 6, 3 and 9: type 14 predominated in children with primary bacteremia, bacteremic pneumonia or
meningitis
, type 9 in adults with bacteremic pneumonia, and types 3 and 7 in adults with
meningitis
. In otitis media types 19 and 3 predominated, in conjunctivitis types 19 and 6, and in sinusitis types 6 and 19. For bacteremic and meningeal infections the current (United States) vaccine provides 83% cover, deletion of the rare (in Australia) types 2, 12 and 25 and the substitution of types 11, 15 and 33 would increase cover by 5% to 88%.
...
PMID:Serotypes in pneumococcal disease. A ten year study in Australia 1970 through 1979. 658 Aug 60
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