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Query: UMLS:C0004623 (
bacterial infection
)
15,226
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Four patients developed legionnaires' disease after bone marrow transplantation. Two cases occurred early after transplant and were considered as part of a hospital epidemic due to contamination of
water
supply. The other two cases were considered to be sporadic because they occurred 3-4 weeks after hospital discharge. The outcome was good in two patients. In the third patient, recurrent disease was probably due to acquired resistance to macrolides, and complete cure was achieved after treatment with pefloxacin and rifampicin. The fourth patient died of overwhelming infection despite early treatment with erythromycin and pefloxacin. During the same period we treated 14 patients with pefloxacin for prevention of
bacterial infection
, of whom none developed Legionella pneumophila infection, while three of the patients reported here were in a group of 11 patients who received only oral non-absorbable antibiotics for gut decontamination. The fourth patient in this report was receiving no antibiotics. Thus pefloxacin seems to be effective as prophylaxis against L. pneumophila infection. When the hospital
water
supply was heated to 60 degrees C and chlorinated, the nosocomial cases in the hospital completely disappeared.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease after bone marrow transplantation. 333 77
Electron microscopic studies on the dynamics of changes in the epithelial cells and some elements of the intestinal mucosal lamina propria were performed on rats after bilateral high ureter ligation. Simultaneously, they were referred to blood serum biochemical and electrolyte disturbances. The ultrastructural changes indicate that as early as in the initial period of acute uraemia
water
-electrolyte disturbances become evident, which are still increasing. In the later period cell organelles alter and
bacterial infection
sets in. Ultrastructural abnormalities of the intestinal mucous membrane are increasing proportionally to biochemical and electrolyte disturbances of the blood serum.
...
PMID:Ultrastructure of the epithelial cells of the small intestinal villi, the surface epithelium of the large intestinal mucosa and some elements of the intestinal mucosal lamina propria in rats with acute uraemia. 402 63
The effect of aspiration of blood on pulmonary host defenses was studied in the rat. Sham and experimental rats had 0.2 ml of saline or blood/100 g body weight injected into their tracheas. One or 24 hours after aspiration rats were challenged with aerosolized, radiolabeled ((32)P), S. aureus. Fourteen hours after bacterial challenge, lungs were removed and intrapulmonary bacterial inactivation was quantified. Significant impairment of bacterial inactivation occurred at both 15 and 38 hours after aspiration of blood, but not after saline. The pulmonary consolidation after aspiration of blood was focal in nature. The lung weight increased but fractional
water
content decreased. Arterial pH, pCO(2), or pO(2) were unaffected by aspiration of blood. The number and viability of macrophages recovered by lavage were similar in control, sham and experimental groups. If similar impairment in pulmonary host defenses occurred in man following aspiration of blood, the patient with aspiration of blood would have an increased susceptibility to
bacterial infection
.
...
PMID:Aspiration of blood and pulmonary host defense mechanisms. 484 85
The lethal effects of the fluorinated ether anesthetics fluroxene (2,2,2-trifluoroethyl vinyl ether) and its ethyl (TFEE) and allyl analogues in male Wistar rats have previously been demonstrated to be potentiated by specific hepatic microsomal cytochromes P-450, and mediated by the common metabolite 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol (TFE). We report here that administration of lethal combinations of anesthetic and cytochrome P-450-inducing agents or of lethal doses of TFE (0.21 g/kg and higher) to rats caused decreased white blood cell counts, necrosis of sternum bone marrow cells and lymphocytes in the thymic cortex, and resulted in Escherichia coli contamination of the blood, lungs, liver, and kidneys of treated rats. Control animals in identical environments were free of bacterial contamination. Pretreatment of rats with the antibiotic tetracycline-HCl in the drinking
water
(0.6 g/liter) from 24 hr before anesthetic or TFE administration significantly diminished the mortality. With TFEE and beta-naphthoflavone induction, mortality was reduced from 85 to 30% by the antibiotic. However, the antibody plaque assay following immunization with sheep erythrocytes indicated that the primary humoral immune response to a thymus-dependent antigen was not impaired in treated rats. These results considered together indicate that metabolic formation of TFE from the anesthetic agents produced a decreased host resistance with subsequent increased susceptibility to
bacterial infection
. If not administered the antibiotic, the animals succumbed to the infection.
...
PMID:Trifluorinated ether anesthetic lethality in rats: the role of bacterial infection. 613 84
Hepatolithiasis is associated with bile stasis and
bacterial infection
. Gallstones found in the intrahepatic bile duct are mostly calcium bilirubinate stones, the presence of which is closely related to the presence of bacteria. In the present study, a high incidence of bile infection was found in hepatolithiasis: 52 of 54 cases (96.3%). This is in concordance with the other reports from Japan as well as from East Asia. E coli was the most frequent isolate followed by Klebsiella, Streptococcus (D), and Pseudomonas. Because of the frequent isolation of E coli in calcium bilirubinate stone cases, beta-glucuronidase from E coli has been thought to be responsible for the formation of calcium bilirubinate stones by effecting hydrolysis of bilirubin glucuronide to free bilirubin, which is insoluble in
water
. The recent introduction of improved anaerobic culture techniques has led to an increasing number of reports on the presence of anaerobes in the biliary tract. Anaerobes were isolated in 6 of 29 cases of hepatolithiasis (20.7%) in our series but more frequently in Kaohsiung, Taiwan (25 of 57 cases, or 44.4%). Bacteroides and Clostridium were the most frequent isolates from the biliary tract and were shown to have beta-glucuronidase activity. Anaerobes were often found together with aerobes, suggesting the possibility of a synergistic effect that may influence the occurrence and development of cholangitis, which is often associated with hepatolithiasis. Though the biliary tract and liver are usually sterile, when an infection of the biliary tract occurs the route by which bacteria reach the region is thought to be hematogenous, lymphatic, or direct intraluminal ascending infection, the last being the most likely. Treatment of cholangitis associated with hepatolithiasis should be directed toward the removal of stones and termination of bile stasis. When cholangitis ensues, control of
bacterial infection
by antibiotics should be started without delay. The choice of antibiotics in controlling cholangitis is presented.
...
PMID:Bacteriology of hepatolithiasis. 638 75
After 14 days' bone marrow maturation, neutrophil granulocytes reach the tissues where for 1-2 days they form the army whose phagocytic function was described by llya Metchnikoff in 1882. At that time, Paul Ehrlich was developing his neutrophil secretory theory which had less success until it returned with a vengeance in the last decade. Neutrophils are not only phagocytes. Above all they are cells that secrete bactericidal effectors and regulators (amplifiers and modulators) of the inflammatory focus. More and more sophisticated methods are being used to study phagocytosis, from the point of view both of the mechanism of chemotaxis and its role in inflammation and of the mediators of oxygen-dependent bactericidal action (superoxide anion, oxygenated
water
, hydroxyl radicals, myeloperoxidase, halogen ions and superoxide dismutase). In addition, the importance of oxygen-independent bactericidal mechanisms has been confirmed by the discovery of proteins such as BPI (Bactericidal Permeability Increasing Protein). Study of neutrophil dysfunction throws light on a number of neutrophil regulatory and effector mechanisms; it also proves useful in explaining the recurrent infections observed in some congenital disorders (chronic granulomatous disease, the "lazy leucocyte syndrome", the Chediak-Higashi syndrome, ichthyrosis , Job's syndrome...) or those associated with transitory neutrophil disorders (measles, severe
bacterial infection
...). Neutropenia induced by some antibiotics is easily demonstrated, but the interactions between these antibiotics and neutrophils are complex: phagocyte concentration of antibiotic, neutrophil inactivation of antibiotic, effect of antibiotic on microbe-leucocyte interaction such as an alteration in phagocytic and chemotactic response. The neutrophil is the first blood cell to arrive at the inflammatory focus; it is also at the centre of the response, next to the humoral mediators which both act upon it and which it itself secretes.
...
PMID:[Neutrophil functions and interactions in the inflammatory reaction]. 673 54
In this study, eel from a locality where the bacterium Vibrio anguillarim was common were transferred to copper-contaminated freshwater and brackish
water
(10%) under laboratory conditions. In one experiment (experiment I) 9 out of 20 eel died and bacteria (in six cases V. anguillarum and in two cases Aeromonas sp.) were isolated from the kidneys, and one was found to be sterile. In this experiment copper did not seem to be an initating factor in developing
bacterial infection
. In two other experiments (II and III) eel were exposed to copper-concentrations up to approx. 25 times as high as the level which is stated as critical in a infection context in a Norwegian work. With the exception of one case no bacteria were isolated from the kidneys and the mortality seemed to be caused by the direct toxic effect of the contaminent. Therefore, some unspecified factors would appear to have been the cause of the results obtained in the Norwegian work.
...
PMID:A study on the possible association of copper pollution with vibriosis in eel. 736 Jun 21
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is an autosomal recessive disease that reflects mutations in the CFTR gene. Multiple mutations in this gene have been detected that lead to a protein (CFTR) that is abnormally metabolized, dysfunction, or both. The full spectrum of the activities of the gene product have not been defined, but it is clear that CFTR can act as a cAMP-regulated Cl- channel. This type of defect is consistent with the physiologic characterization of CF epithelia, which has revealed abnormalities in salt and
water
transport. In the lung, abnormalities in epithelial salt and
water
metabolism lead to abnormal mucociliary clearance. This defect in clerance represents a major failure of lung defense and leads ultimately to infection of the lung with Staphylococcus aureus, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and other bacterial organisms. The chronic inflammatory response to this persistent intraluminal
bacterial infection
leads to protease-induced destruction of airway walls and finally, lung failure. More than 95% of CF patients die of lung disease. The clinical therapy of CF lung disease is limited to agents designed to promote clearance of secretions from the lung and antibiotics to treat the chronic
bacterial infection
. Recent laboratory demonstrations that introduction of the normal CFTR cDNA into CF cells corrects the ion transport defects of these cells has led to the hypothesis that gene therapy in the lung can be an effective, novel mode of therapy for this lung disease. The classic gene transfer vectors, e.g., retroviruses, appear to be not well suited for therapy of lung disease because of the low proliferation rate of airway epithelia in vivo. Recently, adenoviruses, which have a natural tropism for airway epithelia, have been genetically modified (E1-deleted) in an attempt to reduce potential toxicity of this virus and provide space for the CFTR cDNA. A series of in vitro studies have shown that this vector is highly efficient for transferring CFTR into airway epithelial cells in culture and correcting the CF defect. Further, studies in whole animals appear to indicate that this mode of gene transfer is associated with a low degree of toxicity. The present study is a dose-effect study designed to test for the safety and efficacy of E1-deleted recombinant adenovirus containing the CFTR cDNA under a CMV-beta-actin promoter in CF nasal epithelia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Gene therapy for cystic fibrosis using E1-deleted adenovirus: a phase I trial in the nasal cavity. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 751 85
A new mutant derived from the Zucker rat strain called stargazer (homozygous stg/stg) displays abnormal behavior that is characterized by pronounced arching of the neck ("stargazing"), rapid circling, and conspicuous hyperactivity. Results of serologic assays performed by two independent diagnostic laboratories have indicated that the abnormal behavior in the stargazer is not the result of a viral or
bacterial infection
. In this report, different groups of stargazer rats and their normal-behaving littermates (heterozygous stg/+) were assessed with regard to spontaneous behaviors, heart rate, blood pressure, and plasma biochemical profiles. Besides frequent stargazing, the predominant behavioral feature of the stargazers was extreme hyperactivity; they had sevenfold greater activity than the normal littermates (P < 0.05), expressed in the form of rapid ambulation and tail-chasing. The stargazers had significantly greater daily calorie and
water
consumption, despite being significantly smaller in body weight than the littermates (P < 0.05 for all). However, urine output was not different between the two groups. Heart rate and blood pressure also were not different. Stargazers had significantly lower total triglycerides concentration and lower aminotransferase activity than littermates (P < 0.05 for both), a finding probably related to their smaller body size. It is concluded that stargazer rats are extremely hyperactive but normotensive; heterozygous littermates are behaviorally normal, despite being carriers of the stg gene; and routine diagnostic blood testing revealed no important differences between the stargazers and their unaffected littermates.
...
PMID:Quantitative analysis of abnormal spontaneous behavior and clinical assessment of the stargazer rat. 765 Aug 98
Bacterial infection
and bacteremia are common complications in patients with acute liver failure. Bacterial translocation from the gut has been suggested to be a major cause of bacterial infections in experimental acute liver failure. In the present study, a
water
-soluble ethylhydroxyethyl cellulose (EHEC) was administered orally 1 and 24 hours prior to 90% hepatectomy in the rat in order to prevent bacterial translocation in experimental acute liver failure induced by subtotal liver resection in the rat. Ninety percent hepatectomy alone resulted in 80 to 100% translocation to mesenteric lymph nodes or blood 2 and 4 hours after operation. There was no translocation in rats undergoing sham operation or 90% hepatectomy with EHEC administration prior to operation (p < .01). Bacterial overgrowth, increased bacterial adherence onto the intestinal surface, and diminished intestinal and mucosal mass were also observed in animals with subtotal liver resection, but not in those administered EHEC. A delayed 2-hour intestinal transit time occurred in both groups receiving subtotal liver resection, with or without oral EHEC. EHEC inhibited bacterial growth and DNA synthesis and altered bacterial surface properties after 1-hour incubation with bacteria in vitro, an interaction that was not further influenced by time. These results imply that EHEC may alter enterobacterial capacities of metabolism, proliferation, and invasion by effects on the bacterial surface. Furthermore, EHEC seems to possess a trophic action on the intestine, though without enhancing the intestinal motility.
...
PMID:Effects of a water-soluble ethylhydroxyethyl cellulose on gut physiology, bacteriology, and bacterial translocation in acute liver failure. 773 33
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