Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0004610 (bacteremia)
13,199 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The diagnosis of urinary tract sepsis is being made more often today because of increased awareness of the condition and improved techniques in the detection and management of genitourinary disorders. Patients developing urinary tract sepsis (bacteremia or septicemia) usually demonstrate certain predisposing factors: underlying chronic disease, advanced age, general debility, or recent urinary tract sepsis is easily made in a patient who has a sudden onset of fever, chills, malaise, nausea, and vomiting, along with tachycardia and a drop in blood pressure. Cultures should be taken from urine and blood samples, but therapy should be instituted immediately rather than after obtaining the results of cultures.
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PMID:Treatment of genitourinary infections. 122 Sep 5

Vertebral osteomyelitis is still a diagnostic problem. Nonspecific symptoms (low-grade fever, malaise, and weight loss) may dominate. Specific infections may be suggested by the history, and the diagnosis may be reinforced by a transient response to antibiotics. The patient may have symptoms resulting from a secondary paravertebral abscess. Even with fever, back pain, and point tenderness over the vertebral column, the correct diagnosis may not be considered. Predisposing conditions include drug addiction, instrumentation of the infected urinary tract, bacteremia from other causes, or previous back surgery. Diagnosis is made by roentgenographic studies and isolation of the causative organism from blood cultures or from the infected area. Staphylococcus aureus is the most common pathogen, although other microorganisms may be responsible. Intensive intravenous antibiotic treatment appears to be curative, without surgical debridement, external stabilization, or porlonged oral administration of antibiotics.
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PMID:Vertebral osteomyelitis. Still a diagnostic pitfall. 124 27

A patient with multiple, pyogenic hepatic abscesses is described, and the pathophysiology, etiologies, clinical and laboratory manifestations, and management of the disease are reviewed. A 55-year-old man with a history of ethanol abuse and pancreatitis developed fever, chills, general malaise, and right upper quadrant abdominal pain two weeks before hospitalization. Baseline laboratory and hematology results included serum albumin concentration, 3.2 g/dL; serum alkaline phosphatase concentration, 239 mIU/mL; total serum bilirubin concentration, 1.3 mg/dL; white blood cell count, 18,400/cu mm; red blood cell count, 4.7 million/cu mm; hemoglobin, 12.5 g/dL; and hematocrit, 38.8%. Abdominal ultrasound showed echo-free cavities throughout the hepatic parenchyma; abdominal computed-tomography (CT) scan showed hepatomegaly and multiple radiolucent spaces. CT-guided needle aspiration of a hepatic mass yielded purulent material that grew Fusobacterium necrophorum under anaerobic conditions. On day 7, the patient was started on i.v. ampicillin sodium-sulbactam sodium. A CT scan two weeks later showed a reduction in the number and sizes of abscesses. The patient continued i.v. therapy for one month, then was discharged on a regimen of p.o. amoxicillin trihydrate-clavulanate potassium. Hepatic abscesses are either amebic or pyogenic; the latter usually has a higher mortality. The etiologies of pyogenic hepatic abscesses include ascending cholangitis, portal vein bacteremia, systemic bacteremia, extension from a contiguous focus of infection, and trauma. Diagnosis is difficult and relies highly on clinical suspicion. Clinical symptoms include hepatomegaly, fever, chills, and malaise. Abnormal laboratory values include leukocytosis, anemia, and hypoalbuminemia. The abscesses are frequently polymicrobial; Escherichia coli is the most commonly isolated species. CT is the best radiological technique for diagnosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Ampicillin-sulbactam therapy for multiple pyogenic hepatic abscesses. 229 77

An unusual case of Campylobacter fetus subspecies fetus bacteremia was presented. A twenty four year old male was admitted to our hospital due to abdominal pain, general malaise, diarrhea, high fever, and hemoptysis. He was alcoholic and fond of eating raw liver. He had a history of partial gastrectomy and disturbance of pancreatic function. He showed pulmonary empyema, pleuritis, thrombophlebitis of lower legs, jaundice, hepatomegaly, diarrhea, pneumothorax, and low T3 low T4 syndrome. C. fetus subsp. fetus was detected from the venus blood and pleural effusion on admission. He was successfully treated by gentamicin, chloramphenicol, and minocycline. This is the fourth case of C. fetus subsp. fetus bacteremia in the Japanese literature. This microanerophilic gram negative curved bacillus has been increasingly associated with human disease and relapsing in nature, so protracted antimicrobial therapy was recommended.
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PMID:[A case report of Campylobacter fetus subspecies fetus bacteremia]. 269 82

Cyclic neutropenia is a benign, hematologic disorder characterized by recurrent episodes of severe neutropenia at 21 day intervals. There are associated cyclical variations in other blood cells. Patients with this disease have malaise, stomatitis, cervical lymphadenopathy and fever during the recurrent neutropenic periods. The exact cause of cyclic neutropenia is unknown. About one third of human cases appear to be inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern. In the other cases, the disease appears to arise spontaneously with symptoms usually beginning in infancy or early childhood. In adult patients, the disease may be acquired and occur in association with a clonal proliferation of large granular lymphocytes. Clinical studies in man and investigations in grey collie dogs, which have a very similar disease, strongly suggest that cyclic neutropenia is due to an abnormality in the regulation of early hematopoietic precursor cells. Therapy for cyclic neutropenia involves local and symptomatic therapy for the recurrent mouth ulcers and pharyngitis, and antibiotics for episodes of sinusitis, pneumonia, peritonitis, or bacteremia. Therapy with glucocorticosteroids, androgens, and plasmapheresis has been efficacious in a few adult patients, but no therapy has been proven to alter the cycling of blood counts in children. Despite their repetitive illnesses, patients with cyclic neutropenia grow and develop normally. With the help of attentive physicians and dentists, their quality of life and life expectancy are good. Current research on hematopoietic growth factors offers promise of new approaches to therapy.
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PMID:Cyclic neutropenia: a clinical review. 305 63

In an attempt to define a clinical index for the timing of blood cultures in febrile patients with acute leukemia, subjective symptoms at onset of bacteremia were investigated in a total of 109 consecutive episodes. General malaise, chills, and nausea and vomiting were most frequently observed (66%, 59%, and 50%, respectively). The gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms including nausea and vomiting, abdominal discomfort and fullness, abdominal pain, and diarrhea were encountered in 72% of all the episodes, forming the second largest group next to those closely associated with high fever. These GI symptoms were usually mild and of brief durations, and their occurrence had no relation to sites of infections or etiology of bacteremia. In some cases, nausea and vomiting were aggravated by intensive antileukemic chemotherapy or massive GI bleeding. It was thus suggested that GI symptoms, particularly nausea and vomiting, concomitant with a remarkable, sometimes abrupt rise in temperature during granulocytopenia may serve as a useful index for the timing for blood collection for culture to improve the probability of detection of bacteremia.
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PMID:A clinical index for the timing of blood cultures in febrile patients with acute leukemia. 320 53

Two patients had bacteremia with Center for Disease Control group DF-2 Gram-negative rods. Previously described patients infected with this organism had clinical syndromes including cellulitis, meningitis, and endocarditis, and generally were severely ill. One of our patients had acute oligoarticular arthritis. The other had fever, headache, malaise, and a generalized rash. In neither case was bacterial infection considered likely at onset, and neither patient received antibiotic therapy. Both patients recovered completely. The organism is a fastidious Gram-negative rod that only recently has been characterized. Methods for isolating and identifying the organism are reviewed. The spectrum and frequency of illnesses caused by this organism are probably greater than previously recognized.
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PMID:Infection with CDC group DF-2 gram-negative rod: report of two cases. 624 27

Based on the findings of 50 patients with infective endocarditis, 37 affecting the aortic, six the mitral and seven both the aortic and mitral valves, in addition to analysis of predisposing factors, prominent signs and symptoms distinctive for the clinical entity were assessed (Tables 1 to 3). Preexistent conditions such as aortic valve lesions including bicuspid aortic valve as well as mitral valve lesions including mitral valve prolapse were proven in 66%. Factors which may have compromised host defense mechanisms such as cachexia and chronic alcohol or intravenous drug abuse were present in isolated cases. In 38% of the patients, a diagnostic or therapeutic manipulation, suspected to have given rise to the bacteremia, antedated the onset of endocarditis. Malaise, fatigue and chills were the most frequent symptoms (Table 4). Fever and cardiac murmurs were observed in all patients, anemia and bacteremia in 74% of the patients, respectively (Tables 4 to 6). In blood cultures, the most common microorganisms were found to be hemolytic and nonhemolytic streptococci accounting for 65% of positive findings, followed by enterococci and gram-negative bacteria each with 14% respectively (Table 6). Congestive heart failure predominated among cardiac complications with its occurrence in 84% of the patients. Valvular ring or myocardial abscess, aortic or sinus of Valsalva aneurysm, occasionally with perforation, were found in 24% of our patients. Coronary embolism was documented in 6%; infection-associated pericarditis was observed only rarely (Table 7). Extracardiac complications involved the skin, central nervous system, spleen and kidneys, respectively, in 20 to 30% of the patients. Complications afflicting the eyes, lungs, gastrointestinal tract and the musculo-skeletal system were seen with a lesser frequency of 0 to 12% (Table 8). The diagnosis of infective endocarditis, rendered highly-probable by the constellation of fever, cardiac murmur, bacteremia and anemia, necessitates, however, confirmation through cardiac examinations. In this respect, electrocardiographic and radiologic findings are of limited value, although they may be useful in the detection of cardiac complications. In 6% of the patients, positive criteria for myocardial infarction were indicative of coronary embolism and, i 30%, atrioventricular or fascicular block suggested the presence of abscess formation (Table 9). As radiologic evidence of heart failure, 74% of the patients were found to have pulmonary vascular congestion (Table 10).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Detection and evaluation of infectious endocarditis]. 664 98

The antipyretic action of naproxen has been reported as sufficiently selective for neoplasm-related fever such that the use of this agent has been recommended to distinguish neoplastic from infectious fever. The antipyretic effect of naproxen was evaluated in gynecologic oncology patients with advanced pelvic malignancies and fever without obvious source of infection (suspected neoplastic fever). Naproxen (250 mg orally every 8 hr) was given to 12 patients with (i) a daily temperature greater than 38.3 degrees C, (ii) fever for at least 3 days, (iii) no evidence of infection on physical exam, (iv) negative results of blood and urine cultures, and (v) a chest roentgenogram negative for pneumonia. Ten of the 12 patients initially received a minimum of 3 days of empiric antibiotic therapy without resolution of fever. Within 24 hr of starting naproxen therapy, 10 patients' (83%) fever responded: Eight patients (80%) had a complete lysis of fever and two had partial lysis (20%). Temperature response was accompanied by subjective improvement in patient malaise and fatigue. Naproxen therapy was continued for 5-7 days in these patients, and chemotherapy was administered to those patients scheduled to receive it. Two patients did not respond to naproxen therapy in 24 hr; thus, it was stopped and the fever workup was continued. Of these two patients, one was eventually diagnosed with bacteremia after multiple negative blood cultures and initially no response to antibiotics. Naproxen is clinically useful in the palliation of fever-related symptoms in gynecologic oncology patients with suspected neoplastic fever. Naproxen may also allow the limitation of extensive fever workups and prolonged empiric antibiotic therapy in these patients, and prevent delays in systemic therapy or supportive care.
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PMID:The effect of naproxen on fever in patients with advanced gynecologic malignancies. 753 41

A few days after a mild trauma to a toe, a 90-year-old woman presented with fever, malaise and cellulitis. On suspicion of erysipelas the patient was initially treated with benzylpenicillin and cefuroxime. Her general condition improved rapidly, but there was local progression with numerous necrotic areas with surrounding bullae. Vibrio vulnificus was isolated from the blood. After susceptibility testing, the patient was finally treated with ciprofloxacin and pivampicillin, and recovered slowly. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of bacteremia with V. vulnificus in Sweden.
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PMID:First documented case of bacteremia with Vibrio vulnificus in Sweden. 778 22


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