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Query: UMLS:C0004610 (
bacteremia
)
13,199
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Infection
often complicates renal failure and frequently causes death, but the association between renal failure, impaired immunity and infection has not been proved. A recent study showed that patients on dialysis did not show an expected leucocytic response to infection, suggesting that the blunted response was evidence of the immunocompromised state of the uraemic patient. In this study, the relationship between leucocytic responses and infectious challenge was investigated in an animal model of chronic renal failure.
Bacteraemia
, peritonitis and a chronic lung infection were induced in normal and uraemic rats; the leucocytic response was then monitored. In all three infections, the total white blood cell response was significantly less in the uraemic animals. Neutrophil numbers actually increased, but this response was disguised by a pronounced depression in lymphocyte numbers. Our conclusion is that, although the leucocytic response of the uraemic host to infection may be depressed, the changes to individual leucocyte components in the peripheral blood are sufficiently characteristic to provide useful evidence of infection.
...
PMID:Host immune status in uraemia. VI. Leucocytic response to bacterial infection in chronic renal failure. 388 87
Group B streptococcal
bacteremia
outside the perinatal setting is not commonly emphasized. This report reviews all episodes of group B streptococcal
bacteremia
during a four and a half year period in a large community teaching hospital. Fourteen episodes occurred in neonates, four in parturient women, and 28 in other adults. Bacteremic adults were usually elderly with an average age of 68 years. Group B streptococcal
bacteremia
occurred in adults with various underlying diseases, including diabetes mellitus, liver disease, peripheral vascular disease, and hematologic disease, and in those receiving long-term steroid therapy.
Infections
causing group B streptococcal
bacteremia
in adults included decubitus ulcers, pneumonia, endocarditis, cellulitis, arthritis, osteomyelitis, and meningitis. Thirteen of 28 episodes of group B streptococcal
bacteremia
in adults were hospital-acquired. Overall mortality in adults was 70 percent. Group B streptococcal
bacteremia
in adults outside of the perinatal setting is associated with significant underlying diseases and has a high mortality.
...
PMID:Group B streptococcal bacteremia in a community teaching hospital. 388 11
An approach that is useful in classifying the risk factors for the development of acute osteomyelitis is the same as one commonly employed to discuss the mechanisms responsible for pathogenesis: hematogenous dissemination, direct inoculation, and contiguous spread from an adjacent area of soft tissue infection. Acute hematogenous osteomyelitis is predominantly a disease of children. Factors that favor the development of acute bone infection are those that predispose to
bacteremia
. These include indwelling intravascular catheters, distant foci of infection, and intravenous drug abuse. The distant sites of focal infection that are most commonly associated with acute osteomyelitis include the skin as well as urinary and respiratory tracts. Two patient groups with an usual susceptibility to acute skeletal infections are those with sickle cell anemia and chronic granulomatous disease. The second major mechanism for the development of acute osteomyelitis is by direct inoculation. Injuries due to penetrating bites and puncture wounds of the food may serve to infect bone directly. Diagnostic procedures (lumbar puncture, fetal monitoring electrodes, suprapubic aspiration, and heel sticks) may result inadvertently in the inoculation of a neighboring osseous structure. Surgical procedures such as internal fixation of long bone fractures and skeletal traction may cause an infection of the bone. Osteomyelitis may develop as a consequence of contiguous spread of infection from adjacent soft tissue, particularly if vascular insufficiency complicates the clinical picture.
Infection
of the mandible, maxilla, and frontal or mastoid bones may result from persistent or neglected infection of the teeth, paranasal sinuses, or middle ear cavity, respectively. The major risk factor for chronic infection of bone is inadequate or delayed management of acute osteomyelitis or completely unrecognized bone infection.
...
PMID:Risk factors for osteomyelitis. 389 17
Infections
caused by gram-negative bacteria have continued to be a major problem for hospitalized patients. Malignant necrotizing otitis due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa has been encountered with increasing frequency as the number of older diabetic patients has increased. Nosocomial sinusitis and
bacteremia
due to Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter species, or P. aeruginosa develop in hospitalized patients.
Bacteremia
due to E. coli, K. pneumoniae, or P. aeruginosa often follows instrumentation of the urinary, respiratory, or gastrointestinal tracts in the hospitalized patient. Mortality still is excessively high.
Infections
of skin structure, particularly decubitus ulcers in debilitated, bedridden patients, are due to a mixed gram-negative and anaerobic flora; frequently, P. aeruginosa and Enterobacteriaceae resistant to many older agents are the major pathogens. Similarly, osteomyelitis in patients who have undergone previous surgical procedures is caused by various multiply resistant Enterobacteriaceae and P. aeruginosa. In all of these situations, therapy has usually included an aminoglycoside. The availability of drugs such as aztreonam, which has activity directed at aerobic gram-negative bacilli, provides an alternative approach that has proved successful and can be evaluated in more detail in the coming years.
...
PMID:Infections due to gram-negative bacteria: an overview. 390 37
The treatment of acute leukemia in the adult causes prolonged and profound granulocytopenia. When the patient has less than 100 granulocytes per microliter, the risk of life-threatening infection is extremely high. Major infections include
bacteremia
, pneumonia, pharyngitis, esophagitis, colitis, perianal or perirectal lesions, and cellulitis. The major organisms are gram-negative bacilli (especially Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Escherichia coli, and Klebsiella pneumoniae), gram-positive organisms (Staphylococcus epidermidis and Staphylococcus aureus), the yeasts (Candida albicans and Torulopsis glabrata), and the filamentous fungi (Aspergillus flavus and fumigatus).
Infection
prevention includes the return to normal of the patient's host defense mechanisms, reduction of invasive procedures which breach body barriers, and methods to decrease the acquisition of potential pathogens, and to reduce the number of organisms colonizing the patient.
...
PMID:Symposium on infections in the compromised host. The leukemias. 391 66
Trauma is the leading cause of death among young adults, and infection is a leading complication in multiply traumatized patients. All antibiotic use and all infections among 1,009 patients admitted to the Maryland Institute for Emergency Medical Services Systems over a six-month period were reviewed. The vast majority of patients had sustained high-speed automobile trauma and had blunt injuries. All antibiotics were given by the infectious diseases consultants under predetermined protocols. During this time period, 175 infections and 76 bacteremias were identified. Thirty-three percent of the antibiotic use was for prophylaxis. Prophylactic antibiotics were used for open fractures, in which a cephalosporin was used; for abdominal trauma, in which an aminoglycoside and clindamycin or cefoxitin alone was used; and for penetrating open fractures of the oral cavity, in which penicillin was used. As therapy, the aminoglycosides were used in 25 percent, the cephalosporins in 21 percent, the penicillins in 39 percent, and other antibiotics in 15 percent of the cases. The organisms identified as causing infection were Staphylococcus aureus (25 percent), Escherichia coli (18 percent), Enterobacter species (17 percent), Pseudomonas species (12 percent), and Klebsiella species (11 percent). The sites of infections were primary
bacteremia
(11 percent), vascular lines (21 percent), the central nervous system (3 percent), the lower respiratory tract (13 percent), the paranasal sinuses (6 percent), the urinary tract (19 percent), surgical wounds (11 percent), the abdomen (7 percent), and other sites (9 percent). More than 82 percent of the infections that occurred were nosocomial in origin and were related to the various procedures used for monitoring and therapy in these critically ill patients.
Infections
of the abdominal cavity and the lower respiratory tract accounted for eight of the 10 infection-related deaths in these patients.
...
PMID:Identification and treatment of infections in multiply traumatized patients. 402 70
Aztreonam is a novel antimicrobial agent belonging to the monobactam class of antibiotics. It inhibits both beta-lactamase-producing and non-beta-lactamase-producing aerobic gram-negative bacilli, but it has no activity against gram-positive species or against anaerobic species. The efficacy of aztreonam in the treatment of infection in 76 patients and its safety in 87 patients was evaluated. The majority (91 percent) of patients had significant underlying disease, and 47 percent were critically ill. Aztreonam produced an overall clinical response of 86 percent, with 10 of 11 cases of
bacteremia
cured, including four due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa, seven of eight cases of pneumonia, and seven of nine episodes of osteomyelitis.
Infections
due to bacteria resistant to ampicillin, carbenicillin, cefazolin, cefamandole, cefoxitin, and gentamicin were cured. Although 15 of 18 patients with exacerbations of pulmonary infection due to P. aeruginosa showed clinical improvement, bacteriologic cure was not achieved, as has been noted with other drugs. Similarly, patients with major underlying structural abnormalities of the urinary tract showed early relapses of bacteriuria. Aztreonam combined with antistaphylococcal, antistreptococcal, or antianaerobic agents provided an alternative to aminoglycoside use in these non-neutropenic patients. Administration of 1 or 2 g every eight hours yield serum bactericidal levels well in excess of 1:8 against all Enterobacteriaceae and some P. aeruginosa strains. There was a low incidence of adverse side effects, none serious. Overall, aztreonam is a useful alternative to the drugs available for use in hospital-acquired gram-negative infections and provides a chance for more directed therapy.
...
PMID:Use of aztreonam in the treatment of serious infections due to multiresistant gram-negative organisms, including Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 403 74
Urethral catheterization is the single most important predisposing factor in the development of nosocomial urinary tract infection.
Infection
rates, etiologies, and possible methods of prevention are reviewed. Cystoscopy may be followed by a transient
bacteremia
. It is recommended that patients with positive urine cultures who undergo diagnostic cystoscopy receive antibiotic prophylaxis, but this is not required in patients with sterile urine. The incidence of urinary tract infection following transurethral surgery in patients who have not been given prophylactic antibiotics ranges from 6 to 60 per cent. The value of antibacterial prophylaxis in TUR, is still somewhat controversial. The incidence of infection and the value of antibacterial prophylaxis in prostatic biopsy appear to be related to the technique (transperineal or transrectal) used for the biopsy. It is too early to assess the infection risks associated with relatively new urologic procedures, such as ureteroscopy and percutaneous nephrostomy. Nevertheless, any procedure that crushes or manipulates a potentially bacteria-harboring stone carries at least a theoretical risk of infection.
...
PMID:Infectious complications after instrumentation of urinary tract. 404 Feb 91
Urinary tract infections (UTI) due to gram-positive bacteria are fairly uncommon. In order to investigate the efficacy of treatment for UTI secondary to gram-positive rods, we performed a non-comparative study on the effect of cefotaxime in 64 patients with gram-positive UTI. Patients with a history of hypersensitivity to cephalosporins and penicillin as well as patients who had received antibiotic treatment within 48 hours after the administration of cefotaxime, patients with hepatic disease and patients with fatal progressive disease were excluded from the study. UTI was confirmed by positive cultures with a colony count of greater than or equal to 100,000 cfu/ml of gram-positive organisms before treatment with cefotaxime. When sepsis or bacteriuria occurred after two days of hospitalization, the UTI was considered nosocomial. The most common microorganism isolated was Staphylococcus aureus, followed by Streptococcus faecalis. 30% of the patients showed polymicrobic bacteriuria, especially in association with gram-negative bacteria (70%). A high frequency of predisposing factors was present in the urinary tract, mainly obstruction, indwelling catheters, surgery and chronic debilitating diseases. Seven patients developed
bacteremia
. All patients were treated with cefotaxime i.m. or i.v. at a daily dosage ranging between 4 and 12 g. Urine cultures were repeated five days after the beginning of treatment and again two to three weeks after the end.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Infection
1985
PMID:Cefotaxime for the treatment of gram-positive urinary tract infection. 405 38
Infection
of the manubriosternal joint is an exceedingly rare event. We report a case of a 38-year-old patient with systemic lupus erythematosus who developed staphylococcal septic arthritis of this joint after
bacteremia
. Pathogenic factors are discussed. Physicians should be aware of this unusual complication of staphylococcal
bacteremia
.
...
PMID:Septic arthritis involving the manubriosternal joint. 405 6
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