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Query: UMLS:C0004623 (
bacterial infection
)
15,226
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Seventy infants with suspected
bacterial infection
in the first 48 hours of life were treated either with piperacillin and flucloxacillin or with penicillin and gentamicin. Infection was confirmed and successfully eradicated in 6 of the 35 infants receiving piperacillin and flucloxacillin. Four infants treated with penicillin and gentamicin had confirmed infection and one deteriorated initially but then recovered when treated with piperacillin. Serum piperacillin concentrations above 100 mg/l and cerebrospinal fluid piperacillin concentrations of 2.6-6 mg/l were noted for up to four hours and 7 hours respectively, even in the absence of inflamed meninges, after administration of piperacillin 100 mg/kg body weight intravenously. Median half life of piperacillin was 6.5 hours and was prolonged in renal impairment.
Piperacillin
is considered to be a safe and effective first line single agent treatment for early neonatal infection but because some Escherichia coli are resistant to it we recommend that a second agent be used in critically ill infants with neutropenia or meningitis.
...
PMID:Piperacillin in early neonatal infection. 655 60
The safety of piperacillin/tazobactam was investigated in Phase I and Phase III clinical studies. In 22 Phase I pharmacokinetic studies, 242 healthy subjects and 232 patients were given single and multiple doses of piperacillin/tazobactam, piperacillin alone, tazobactam alone, and/or placebo. Interaction with tobramycin and vancomycin was also studied. Of 1201 patients enrolled in Phase III trials, 944 received piperacillin 4 g plus tazobactam 500 mg every 8 h for lower respiratory tract infections, complicated urinary tract infections, skin and soft tissue infections, and intra-abdominal infections, or piperacillin 2 g plus tazobactam 500 mg 8 hourly for less severe infections; 90 patients received imipenem/cilastatin as a comparative regimen.
Piperacillin
4 g and tazobactam 500 mg were also administered every 6 h with an aminoglycoside to 167 patients with pulmonary infection or neutropenia and
bacterial infection
. In all trials, piperacillin/tazobactam was found to be safe and well tolerated. One death was deemed possibly drug-related. Thirty-eight patients were withdrawn from the trials because of adverse experiences, most often diarrhoea and allergic skin reactions. The commonest laboratory abnormalities related to liver function. The safety of piperacillin/tazobactam appears similar to that of other beta-lactam/beta-lactamase inhibitor combinations.
...
PMID:Safety profile of piperacillin/tazobactam in phase I and III clinical studies. 838 52
Tazobactam/
Piperacillin
(TAZ/PIPC) is a newly developed intravenous antibiotics, in which TAZ, a new potent inhibitor of beta-lactamases, is combined with PIPC, a well-established beta-lactam antibiotics, at the ratio of 1:4. In this study, we clinically evaluated efficacy of the drug in 14 pediatric patients with various infections, and pharmacokinetic study was applied to 3 patients. Range of age was from 1-month to 15 1/4-year. Patients consisted of 9 cases of pneumonia, 3 urinary tract infection, 1 acute otitis media, and 1 left sacroiliitis with sepsis. Standard dose of TAZ/PIPC was 50 mg/kg/dose and administered 2-4 times per day with intravenous injection or drip infusion. Two cases of pneumonia were excluded because of non-
bacterial infection
. Nine causative pathogens including 3 Gram-positive cocci and 6 Gram-negative bacilli were detected in 7 patients, of which 5 Gram-negative strains produced bete-lactamase. All of cases showed 100% of efficacy rate and bacteriological eradication rate. It was noted that beta-lactamase-producing E. coli and B. catarrhalis were eradicated efficiently by TAZ/PIPC, which should be resistant to PIPC alone according to MIC data. Non-serious diarrhea and discomfort of back with nausea were observed in one each patients as side effects. Both of side effects were transient, and improved with anti-diarrheic agent or cessation of the drug, respectively. As abnormal laboratory test results, moderate increases of the eosinophils and platelets counts as well as moderate elevation of the transaminases were observed in 2 separate patients. Pharmacokinetics study showed that Cmax, T1/2, and AUC were similar to the data reported in adult patients. Urinary recovery rate in the first 6 hours also resemble the data from adult patients. Based on above results, TAZ/PIPC is a useful agents pediatric infections by beta-lactamase producing strains also.
...
PMID:[Clinical studies of tazobactam/piperacillin (TAZ/PIPC) in pediatric patients]. 969 64
Patients with liver cirrhosis have an impaired function of reticuloendothelial system; moreover they exhibit several defects of cellular and humoral immunity. These deficiencies enhance their susceptibility to bacterial infections. The prognosis is better if the infection is detected as early as possible and treated adequately. Except in cases of septicemia, empirical monotherapy is effective. Broad-spectrum beta-lactam antibiotics have proved efficient for the treatment of severe infections; a limitation of third-generation cephalosporins is their ineffectiveness against Enterococci; the acylureidopenicillins may be a good choice since they are active against Enterococci and most enteric, pulmonary and urinary pathogens, including Escherichia coli and Streptococcus pneumoniae which are the pathogens most frequently isolated from cirrhotic patients with severe infection. Similarly, the combination of a beta-lactamase inhibitor with a penicillin may offer an adequate antibacterial spectrum.
Piperacillin
, like other beta-lactam antibiotics, can induce leukopenia in patients with cirrhosis; the more severe the hepatic dysfunction, the greater the risk; a reduction in dosages is necessary. Meropenem monotherapy is effective and safe for the initial therapeutic regimen of
bacterial infection
. The fluoroquinolones may be useful for the treatment of infections in liver cirrhosis; however, the marginal activity against S. pneumoniae is a drawback. Oral long-term fluoroquinolone administration is utilized for the prevention of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis recurrence; selective intestinal decontamination with fluoroquinolones is useful in preventing bacterial infections in cirrhosis with gastrointestinal hemorrhage. Given the high risk of nephrotoxicity due to aminoglycosides in liver cirrhosis, these antibiotics should be used only in cases of severe infection with septicemia, in which beta-lactam-aminoglycoside combination is indicated for rapid bactericidal effect and enhanced killing afforded by synergism. Perhaps a short course (no more than 3 days) and a once-daily schedule of administration would minimize the risk of aminoglycoside-induced nephrotoxicity.
...
PMID:[The choice of antibiotic therapy for bacterial infections in patients with cirrhosis of the liver]. 1496 93
Bacterial infection
remains a major problem after solid organ transplantation (SOT), especially in children.
Piperacillin
-tazobactam (Pip-Tazo) is a beta-lactam-antibiotic combination with a broad spectrum of activity including gram-positive cocci as well as gram-negative rods, non-fermentative and anaerobic bacteria. The aim of this retrospective study was to critically review our experience with Pip-Tazo as perioperative prophylactic agent in pediatric non-renal SOT. Between 1993 and 2003 Pip-Tazo was used as initial perioperative prophylaxis in 45 pediatric patients who underwent a total of 49 transplants (36 liver-, seven cardiac-, two lung-, and four small bowel-) at our department. Median age of the children was 7.9 (range 0.5-18.1) years. A total of 34 rejection episodes following 27 transplants were diagnosed. During first hospitalization 44 infectious episodes were observed. Bacteria were responsible for 22 episodes including sepsis (n = 10), pneumonia (n = 5), wound infection (n = 4), urinary tract infection (n = 1), and clostridial colitis (n = 2). The isolated organisms were gram-positive cocci (n = 12), gram-negative rods (n = 3), non-fermentative bacilli (n = 4), and anaerobes (n = 3). Ten episodes were caused by Pip-Tazo resistant bacteria. Twenty-one of these infections were observed following antirejection therapy with pulse steroids. At later time points nine infectious episodes were successfully treated with a second course of Pip-Tazo. During follow up, eight patients died. Six deceased perioperatively: five from infection including aspergillosis (n = 4) and Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia (n = 1) and cerebrovascular bleeding (n = 1) and two children later on. At present 37 children (82%) are alive with well functioning graft after a median follow up of 39.2 (range 0.6-123.5) months. No severe side effects caused by Pip-Tazo were observed in any of the children. Pip-Tazo may be a suitable single agent for perioperative prophylaxis in pediatric non-renal solid organs recipients, however, a prospective comparative study is needed to make final conclusions.
...
PMID:Experience with the use of piperacillin-tazobactam in pediatric non-renal solid organ transplantation. 1723 22