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Query: UMLS:C0004610 (
bacteremia
)
13,199
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study was designed to ascertain if certain characteristics of febrile patients could help to identify infectious or bacteremic conditions. Patients with axillary temperature higher than 37,4 degrees C visiting the emergency room and requiring hospitalization were included in the study. The sample included 345 patients.
Infections
made up 89% of the causes of fever. The most frequent site of infection was the respiratory system (39%). 13% of hemocultures were positive. Gram negative germs were the most frequent agents. Infectious FS was related with the presence of predisposing factors, duration of fever, erythrocyte sedimentation rate and hemoglobin.
Bacteremia
was associated to treatment prior hospitalization, average temperature, hemoglobin, AST and urinary sediment. We may conclude that infections are the most frequent cause of FS. We could not found any clinical or analytical parameters that, used together, could help us to identify infectious or bacteremic FS.
...
PMID:[Febrile syndrome in hospitalized patients]. 139 57
Infections
that involve the attention of the surgeon include those that require operations for cure as well as those that complicate emergency and elective surgical procedures. Mechanical correction is of paramount importance in the eradication of such infections with antibiotics serving an adjuvant role, primarily to clear lymphatics and prevent
bacteremia
and seeding of distant sites. Review of the current hospital antibiotic susceptibility profile is important to determine likely sensitivity to expected pathogens.
Infection
of the urinary tract remains the most common nosocomial infection, but in surgical patients the severe infections are pneumonia, fasciitis, and peritonitis. Often caused by the gram-negative Enterobacteriaceae, empiric broad spectrum antibiotic therapy is initiated after cultures are obtained. Bacterial infection of the respiratory tract is often difficult to diagnose in severely ill patients because the underlying fever, leukocytosis, and chest X-ray changes are often nonspecific. Reliance on sputum gram stain and culture is important to guide antibiotic therapy. Empiric treatment of peritonitis requires knowledge of the normal enteric flora and the likely pathogenic organisms. The most lethal agent against obligate anaerobic organisms is atmospheric oxygen, yet antibiotic coverage against these organisms appears wise, particularly when debridement or resection will be delayed or not performed. Staphylococcus aureus is still the most commonly cultured organism from our Surgical Intensive Care Unit and Burn Unit and S. aureus is often responsible for central line and burn wound infection. For patients in septic shock, we favor administration of a broad-spectrum penicillin or cephalosporin combined with an aminoglycoside, with subsequent narrowing of the antibiotic spectrum based on culture results. Antibiotic efficacy, toxicity, efficiency, and cost all must be weighed in the decision-making process.
...
PMID:Current perspectives on antibiotic use in the treatment of surgical infections. 144 60
A total of 56 patients were diagnosed as primary myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) at Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, Kaohsiung from April 1986 to December 1991. The median age was 65 years with an equal sex ratio. All patients presented with anemia and 52% with pancytopenia. The overall median survival for the entire group was 7 months, in which the chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (CMMoL) was 7 months, and 4 months for each of the refractory anemia with excess of blasts (RAEB) or the refractory anemia with excess of blasts in transformation (RAEB-T), however, the median survival had not been reached at 27 months for refractory anemia (RA) and at 33 months for refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts (RARS). Low-does arabinosyl cytosine (Ara-C) was administered in 9 patients with RAEB and RAEB-T, but no survival benefit was noted.
Infection
, especially pneumonia, was the most common cause of death. In 61 febrile episodes with clinically suspected sepsis, 10 (17%) were documented to associate with
bacteremia
. Twelve patients (7 RAEB, 4 RAEB-T, and 1 CMMoL) evolved to acute myelogenous leukemia (AML), the median interval from diagnosis to evolution was 4.8 months. This series indicates that only two groups of FAB subtypes could be clearly separated in terms of morphological findings and clinical outcome; RA and RARS constitute a good prognostic group, whereas RAEB, CMMoL, and RAEB-T constitute a poor prognostic group.
...
PMID:Primary myelodysplastic syndrome: an analysis of 56 patients. 146 34
Methods were developed for the insertion and maintenance of long-term central venous catheters in dogs in order to provide reliable venous access during bone marrow transplantation. Single-lumen, 9.6 Fr Hickman catheters with a VitaCuff were used. The catheter was inserted into the jugular vein via a surgical cut-down, and tunnelled subcutaneously to exit over the thoracic spine. Fluoroscopic guidance was necessary to ensure proper positioning of the catheter tip in the right atrium. The catheter was secured at the venous entrance site with a grommet and at the cutaneous exit site with a finger-cuff suture. The exit site was bandaged; dressings were changed daily. Five dogs were studied. Catheter insertion and maintenance techniques were developed using two dogs. For the other three dogs, which developed 7 wk of profound myelosuppression induced by total body irradiation, the catheters were used for blood sampling and infusions of antibiotics, fluids, and blood products. For these three dogs there were 261 total catheter-days. Complete catheter obstruction did not occur. Partial obstruction (inability to withdraw blood) occurred for 13 days with one catheter. The tip of this catheter was in the cranial vena cava. One irradiated dog had a staphylococcal exit site infection for several days after catheter insertion, which resolved with antibiotic therapy.
Infections
of the subcutaneous tunnel, and catheter associated
bacteremia
, were not identified. Infectious and hemorrhagic complications of myelosuppression were less severe than in six other dogs where intermittent venipuncture was used for vascular access during radiation induced myelosuppression. In conclusion, long-term central venous catheterization is feasible in dogs during profound myelosuppression and markedly facilitates patient management.
...
PMID:The use of an implantable central venous (Hickman) catheter for long-term venous access in dogs undergoing bone marrow transplantation. 147 9
During a three-year period eight patients with blood cultures positive for Stomatococcus mucilaginosus were identified at two university hospitals. One patient without any signs of infection had a central venous catheter that was colonized with this organism, two patients had transient
bacteremia
without definite relationship to underlying disease, whereas the remaining five patients suffered from clinically significant infections. Of these last five patients, one had undergone prior head and neck surgery and four had hematologic malignancy with mild to severe neutropenia; two of the latter patients developed the infection subsequent to dental surgery. Besides neutropenia and mucosal damage in the oropharynx, quinolone antibacterial prophylaxis may have been an additional risk factor for the development of S. mucilaginosus
bacteremia
in these patients. A thorough review of the literature revealed that in addition to our findings, endocarditis and foreign body infections are further typical clinical manifestations. Although the overall antibiotic susceptibility pattern of S. mucilaginosus resembles that of streptococci, it is suggested that penicillin G may not be the drug of choice for initial therapy of particularly severe infections. S. mucilaginosus can be easily differentiated from other gram-positive bacteria when certain key criteria (e.g. adherence to agar surfaces, poor growth on Mueller-Hinton agar, presence of a capsule) as well as an array of biochemical tests, including commercially available identification systems, are applied. Our own and published data emphasize that both microbiologists and clinicians should be increasingly aware of this opportunistic pathogen.
Infection
PMID:Bacteremia caused by Stomatococcus mucilaginosus: report of seven cases and review of the literature. 152 87
Symptoms of infection in the elderly may be absent, vague or atypical.
Infection
should be suspected when an elderly patient presents with a decline in well-being or with non-specific symptoms such as falls, dizziness, confusion, anorexia or weakness. Common infections include bacterial pneumonia, urinary tract infection, intra-abdominal infections, gram-negative
bacteremia
and infection of decubitus ulcers. Antibiotic therapy is not recommended for asymptomatic bacteriuria or locally infected decubitus ulcers. Drug dosages should be adjusted for the age-associated decline in renal function and for hepatic or renal insufficiency. The trend in antibiotic therapy is evolving toward the use of third-generation cephalosporins instead of aminoglycosides to avoid the side effects of nephrotoxicity and ototoxicity. Pneumococcal, influenza and tetanus/diphtheria immunizations help prevent morbidity and mortality.
...
PMID:Common infections in the elderly. 848 May 62
Patients with febrile urinary tract infections with (80 patients) or without (88 patients) positive blood cultures were reviewed. Eighty-nine percent of the infections were community acquired. The bacteremic patients were older, Escherichia coli was the most commonly found organism in both groups. The most important finding in this study was increased frequency of resistance to three common urinary tract antibiotics (ampicillin, cephalothin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole) in E. coli from patients with non-bacteremic compared with bacteremic infections. Complications occurred in 28 bacteremic and in three non-bacteremic patients. Six patients died, all with
bacteremia
. The significantly higher temperature at admittance among patients with gram-negative versus gram-positive bacteremic infection possibly reflects an effect by endotoxin.
Infection
PMID:Bacteremic and non-bacteremic febrile urinary tract infection--a review of 168 hospital-treated patients. 164 89
Increased use of autotransfusion for traumatic hemorrhage may reduce amounts of banked blood needed for severe injuries. Autotransfusion is standard for traumatic hemothorax, but has been limited for abdominal injuries. This prospective study used microbiologic data from 152 patients with intestinal injuries. Where anticipated blood loss was greater than 1,000 mL, blood from the peritoneal cavity was cultured, washed, concentrated, and recultured before reinfusion.
Infection
rates were stratified using the Penetrating Abdominal Trauma Index (PATI). Fifty patients with PATI greater than 20 who received banked blood (group I) (mean: 1,800 mL) were compared with 20 patients (group II) who received autotransfused, potentially culture-positive blood (CPB) (mean: 3,900 mL). Wound infection rates were identical in both groups (25%). No statistically significant increase was found in site-specific infection risk when severity of injury was stratified according to PATI.
Bacteremias
, pulmonary infections, and urinary infections were not caused by bacteria cultured from autotransfused blood. We conclude that washed CPB may be autotransfused without significantly increased risk of infection in patients with severe abdominal injuries.
...
PMID:Autotransfusion of potentially culture-positive blood (CPB) in abdominal trauma: preliminary data from a prospective study. 173 72
We describe 10 new cases of
bacteremia
due to Stomatococcus mucilaginosus and review eight other cases that have been described in the literature. The most common clinical presentations were endocarditis, catheter-related infection, and septicemia. Commonly associated risk factors were intravenous drug abuse, cardiac valve disease, the presence of foreign bodies (especially indwelling vascular catheters), and immunocompromised states. S. mucilaginosus
bacteremia
is readily treatable with antibiotics. This organism is of low virulence, but appears to be an emerging pathogen.
Infection
due to S. mucilaginosus is likely to be underreported because the organism may be easily misidentified and information on it is not included in the databases of many automated microbiologic identification systems.
...
PMID:Infections due to Stomatococcus mucilaginosus: 10 cases and review. 177 36
Infections
are frequent in patients with liver cirrhosis, as their defenses against infectious agents are altered. But
bacteremia
occurring in cirrhotic patients has seldom been reported in the literature. From 1981 to 1986, we collected 197 cases with 228 episodes of
bacteremia
for this retrospective study. The incidence of
bacteremia
in cirrhotic patients was 8.8%; no significant difference was noted between cirrhotic patients with variant etiologies of HBV(+), HBV(-) and alcohol. But the incidence increased with the severity of the disease (1%, 4.8%, 17.1% in Child's A, B, C groups, respectively). Gram-negative bacteria were the predominant microorganisms of
bacteremia
(75.6%). Among them, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Aeromonas hydrophilia were the three most commonly detected microorganisms. Gram-positive bacterias were detected in 21.2% of patients with
bacteremia
, with predominance of the Streptococcus group and Staphylococcus aureus. In about 26.3% of cases the infectious sources were the same by bacteria cultures as from blood. The most common sources were spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, urinary tract infection, pneumonia and biliary tree infection. In cirrhotic patients with and without
bacteremia
, the mortality rate increased significantly in the
bacteremia
group (54.8% vs 23.2%, P less than 0.05). By Child's classification, the mortality of patients with classes B and C increased significantly after onset of
bacteremia
. There was no significant difference in mortality between bacteremic patients in the HBV(+), HBV(-) and alcohol groups. In conclusion,
bacteremia
is a severe complication of liver cirrhosis and a sign of a poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Bacteremia in patients with cirrhosis of the liver. 177 12
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