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Query: UMLS:C0004623 (bacterial infection)
15,226 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The bacterial infections occurring during the period of neutropenia have been reviewed in a series of 100 allogeneic bone marrow transplant patients. Forty episodes of septicaemia were observed, in 37 patients, with a large majority of Gram positive organisms (thirty cases). Only one case of major local infection occurred (Gram negative meningitis). A non-bacterial infection was seen in 10 patients, and 36 patients presented with fever of unknown origin. Three patients who failed to engraft died of bacterial infection. Surveillance cultures showed that upper respiratory tract was a frequent site of invasion, not only for Gram positive, but also for Gram negative organisms (Pseudomonas aeruginosa).
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PMID:[Early bacterial infections after allogenic bone marrow grafts]. 305 72

Eight patients with severe strongyloidiasis complicating renal transplantation are reported. Twenty-one additional cases from the English-language literature are reviewed. In this setting, systemic strongyloidiasis is an often baffling illness involving multiple organ systems that is frequently complicated by serious bacterial infection. Bacteremia, meningitis, urinary tract infection, and pneumonia resulting from enteric organisms are common. In order to make the diagnosis, larvae must be sought by direct microscopy of stool, upper intestinal fluid, sputum, urine, or biopsy specimens. Treatment with oral thiabendazole in prolonged or repeated courses is recommended. Effective parenteral therapy is not available. Following treatment, previously parasitized patients must be tested at regular intervals to detect therapeutic failure or reinfection. Screening of patients awaiting renal transplantation for chronic intestinal strongyloidiasis is suggested. Improvement of the observed 52% mortality will depend upon heightened awareness by physicians caring for renal transplant candidates, and upon improved therapeutic regimens.
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PMID:Opportunistic strongyloidiasis in renal transplant recipients. 309 91

Analysis of 121 consecutive cases with infection of the nervous system showed that the majority were the granulomatous infections, tuberculosis and brucellosis (53 cases (44 per cent)). Thirty-nine patients had tuberculosis and 14 had brucellosis. The clinical and microbiological pattern of infection differs from that frequently reported from Western countries. Tuberculosis lesions presented with features of intracranial space occupying lesions (14), spinal cord compression (13) and lumbosacral root compression (1 child). Ten adults and one child had tuberculous meningitis. Pyogenic meningitis present in 38 cases (31 per cent), was most common in children. The infecting organism was identified in 26 patients; Gram-positive cocci in 17, Haemophilus influenzae in four and other Gram-negative organisms in five. Eleven patients had brain abscesses, caused by bacterial infection in eight, fungal infection in two and Toxoplasma gondii in one. Nineteen patients had clinical and pathological features of viral meningitis. Fourteen patients (12 per cent) died including six children with pyogenic meningitis.
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PMID:The pattern of infection of the nervous system in Riyadh: a review of 121 cases. 325 3

We prospectively examined whether febrile infants younger than 2 months of age who were defined as being at low risk for having bacterial infection could be observed as outpatients without the usual complete evaluation for sepsis and without antibiotic treatment. A total of 237 previously healthy febrile infants were seen at the Pediatric Emergency Room over 17 1/2 months. One hundred forty-eight infants (63%) fulfilled the criteria for being at low risk: no physical findings consisting of soft tissue or skeletal infections, no purulent otitis media, normal urinalysis, less than 25 white blood cells per high-power field on microsopic stool examination, peripheral leukocyte count 5000 to 15,000/mm3 with less than 1500 band cells/mm3. One infant appeared too ill to be included, and had sepsis and meningitis. None of the 148 infants at low risk had bacterial infections, versus 21 of 88 (24%) of those at high risk (P less than 0.0001); eight of 88 (9%) had bacteremia. Of the 148 infants classified as being at low risk for having bacterial infection, 62 (42%) were discharged to home, and 72 (49%) were initially observed for less than or equal to 24 hours and then discharged. Seventeen infants (11%) were hospitalized: in six, low risk became high risk; six had indications other than fever; and five because the study physicians could not be found. The 137 nontreated infants were closely observed as outpatients. The duration of fever was less than 48 hours in 42%, and less than 96 hours in 91%. All infants were observed for at least 10 days after the last examination. The fever resolved spontaneously in all infants but two, with otitis media, who were treated as outpatients. Our data suggest that management of fever in selected young infants as outpatients is feasible if meticulous follow-up is provided.
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PMID:Ambulatory care of febrile infants younger than 2 months of age classified as being at low risk for having serious bacterial infections. 334 73

Plasma fibronectin levels and complete blood cell counts were assessed prospectively among 100 infants less than 3 months of age with the provisional diagnosis of "possible sepsis". Seven of the ten infants with culture-proved bacteremia, meningitis, or urinary tract infection had low plasma fibronectin levels as did 12 (13%) of 90 infants with superficial or no documented bacterial infection. The positive predictive value of a low plasma fibronectin level in conjunction with leukocytosis and elevated band ratio for discriminating serious bacterial infection was 71%. Normal white blood cell counts or fibronectin level alone or in combination predicted the absence of serious bacterial infection with an accuracy of at least 94%. Plasma fibronectin determination provides a useful adjunct to the complete blood cell count for the rapid evaluation of extent of illness in young infants with possible sepsis.
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PMID:Role of fibronectin in diagnosing bacterial infection in infancy. 339 79

Sixty-four episodes of bacterial infection were identified over a 44-month period in 16 of 28 patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and 14 of 31 patients with AIDS-related complex. Nineteen of the 30 infected patients were parenteral drug abusers, 10 were from Caribbean Islands and had no identified risk factor, and one was a homosexual male. Fourteen patients had 21 episodes of community-acquired pneumonia: Streptococcus pneumoniae (10), Haemophilus influenzae (three), other Haemophilus species (three), group B beta-hemolytic streptococci (one), Staphylococcus aureus (one), Branhamella catarrhalis (one), Legionella pneumophila (one), and Mycoplasma pneumoniae (one). Seven patients had eight episodes of nosocomial pneumonia caused by gram-negative bacilli. Twenty-five episodes of community-acquired bacteremia and nine episodes of nosocomial bacteremia were associated with specific sites of infection. Other infections included meningitis (two), urinary tract infection (one), and abscesses involving subcutaneous and deep tissues (12). Sixteen patients had recurrent infections; 11 of these had or eventually had AIDS. Community-acquired bacterial infections in patients with AIDS or AIDS-related complex are common and may be recurrent but have low fatality rates. In comparison, nosocomial bacterial infections occur primarily in patients with AIDS and have high fatality rates.
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PMID:Bacterial infections in adult patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and AIDS-related complex. 357 59

Intraventricular administration of amphotericin B for meningitis due to Cryptococcus neoformans is usually reserved for selected, seriously ill patients with recurrent disease. Between September 1973 and November 1983, 10 of 23 patients treated for cryptococcal meningitis at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center received intraventricular amphotericin B through subcutaneous reservoirs, in addition to systemic therapy. The value of intraventricular amphotericin B was assessed in the 13 patients treated for first episodes of meningitis with systemic amphotericin B and flucytosine. Death during therapy occurred in one of six patients with intraventricular and systemic therapy compared with six of seven patients with systemic therapy alone (p = 0.025). The cerebrospinal fluid was sterilized in six of six patients given systemic and intraventricular therapy compared with three of seven given systemic therapy alone (p = 0.049), and the cerebrospinal fluid cryptococcal antigen titer declined in six of six patients given systemic and intraventricular therapy compared with two of seven given systemic therapy alone (p = 0.016). In the 10 patients who received intraventricular therapy, there were no complications related to reservoir insertion; however, complications related to reservoir use requiring replacement or revision occurred in two patients, and bacterial infection occurred in one but was treated successfully without removal of the reservoir. Although these data are retrospective, they suggest that early therapy with intraventricular amphotericin B in combination with systemic therapy may be beneficial and relatively safe in patients with cryptococcal meningitis and a poor prognosis.
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PMID:Intraventricular therapy of cryptococcal meningitis via a subcutaneous reservoir. 372 51

All types of central nervous system (CNS) infections were investigated in a 1966 birth cohort of 12,000 children from Northern Finland followed up from birth to the age of 14. 174 CNS infections occurred in 167 children, 110 boys and 64 girls. The annual incidence of bacterial CNS infections was 36.3/100,000 and that of viral infections 688.0/100 000. It is concluded that bacterial CNS infections were recorded very fully but only 2/3 of the viral infections could be traced, even though the more severe cases were quite well documented. 8/55 children (14.5%) with bacterial meningitis died; the corresponding figure for viral encephalitis and meningitis (excluding mumps) was 3/67 (4.5%). 17/55 (30.9%) developed mental retardation, epilepsy, cerebral palsy or hearing defect or some combination of these after bacterial CNS infection, and 9 (8.1%) after viral infection. The difference with respect to the children who had not experienced CNS infection was statistically significant only for the bacterial infection cases. CNS infections explained 7.6% of all deaths from 28 days to 14 years, 3% of the handicapping cases of cerebral palsy, mental retardation and epilepsy or some combination of these, and 6.6% of the hearing defects.
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PMID:Incidence and prognosis of central nervous system infections in a birth cohort of 12,000 children. 376 48

In a retrospective study of 80 patients over 55 years old, the efficacy of lumbar puncture in evaluating elderly demented patients was examined. Despite a cost of $381 per procedure, in addition to cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) evaluation, no diagnosis was made on the basis of the information obtained in any of the patients (53 per cent) who underwent lumbar puncture. The only abnormalities found were 11 cases of nonspecific elevations in CSF protein and one case of abnormal cellularity not related to bacterial infection. An additional 422 cases of dementia from other series were reviewed, and only four patients were found whose diagnosis could have been made by lumbar puncture--one patient had neurosyphilis, and the other three were postencephalitic. In addition, the literature on complications of lumbar puncture was reviewed. There were no serious complications of lumbar puncture in the present study. The authors concluded that although it is low-risk, lumbar puncture cannot currently be recommended for routine use in the evaluation of elderly demented patients, but should be used in evaluating demented patients under 55 years of age, patients with rapid onset or progression of dementia, patients with syphilis serology in suspected cases of viral encephalitis, and patients with signs and symptoms of fungal meningitis.
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PMID:The role of lumbar puncture in the evaluation of dementia: the University of Pittsburgh Study. 399 48

We studied 182 sick, febrile (temperature greater than 38 degrees C) infants less than 3 months of age, who presented at our Tripler Army Medical Center, Honolulu, during a one-year period, to determine the relative causes of fever in this age group. Blood, cerebrospinal fluid, urine, nasopharyngeal secretions, and stool specimens were cultured for bacterial and viral pathogens. Paired acute and convalescent sera were collected to serologically confirm infection in infants from whom viral isolations were obtained only from the nasopharynx or stool. A viral pathogen was isolated in 75 infants (41%) and a bacterial pathogen was isolated in 27 infants (15%). Nonpolio enteroviruses were the most common pathogens demonstrated. They were isolated from 64 infants (35%), and 40 (62%) of these infants had aseptic meningitis, the most frequently made diagnosis. Urinary tract infection was the most common bacterial infection observed. It occurred in 20 infants (11%) and was most often seen without associated pyuria in uncircumcised male infants. Salmonellosis, the second most common bacterial infection, was observed in six infants (3%), and two of these did not have diarrhea or other gastrointestinal tract symptoms. No infant had septicemia and only one infant had bacterial (group B streptococcal) meningitis.
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PMID:Bacterial and viral pathogens causing fever in infants less than 3 months old. 403 21


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