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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of Listeria monocytogenes septicaemia with meningitis is described. Predisposing factors in this case included chronic liver disease,
diabetes mellitus
and liver malignancy. The infection responded poorly to
ampicillin
.
...
PMID:Listeria monocytogenes meningitis: case report. 41 68
Serious infections in adults due to group B streptococci have been infrequently reported. We describe 24 such patients. Bacteremic pyelonephritis, pneumonitis and endometritis were the most common clinical syndromes observed. Group B streptococci infections tended to occur in patients with underlying illnesses, particularly genitourinary disorders and
diabetes mellitus
. Mortality was surprisingly low (8 per cent). Type III was the serotype most commonly isolated, and there was no significant correlation of different serotypes with specific organ-system involvement. Group B streptococcal isolates from these patients were uniformly sensitive to penicillin,
ampicillin
, cephalothin, chloramphenicol, erythromycin and clindamycin; all were highly resistant to kanamycin. Eighty-seven per cent were resistant to tetracycline. Although consistently sensitive to penicillin, the minimal inhibitory concentrations were significantly higher for group B than group A streptococci (p less than 0.0005).
...
PMID:Serious infections in adults due to group B streptococci. Clinical and serotypic characterization. 78 13
One of the major complications of
diabetes mellitus
is the occurrence of diabetic foot infection. The polymicrobial nature of diabetic foot infection has been well documented in the literature. In order to avoid amputation of the tissue affected, the ulceration and infection must be appropriately diagnosed and treated. This paper describes the microbiologic and clinical features obtained from 100 consecutive diabetic infected foot patients treated with either cefoxitin or
ampicillin
/sulbactam.
...
PMID:Bacteriology of 100 consecutive diabetic foot infections and in vitro susceptibility to ampicillin/sulbactam versus cefoxitin. 155 22
Parenteral antibiotics are used as an adjunct to amputation or operative debridement for patients with
diabetes
who require emergency surgery for a septic foot. In 26 patients with a
diabetes
-related foot infection, one dose of various intravenous antibiotic regimens (gentamicin and clindamycin, ticarcillin/clavulanate,
ampicillin
/sulbactam) was administered during the hour before the procedure, and assays were performed to measure the antibiotic serum and tissue levels at the time of surgical debridement. Aerobic and anaerobic cultures were performed on infected tissue. The 172 bacterial isolates, including 95 aerobes and 77 anaerobes, (6.6 isolates per patient) underwent antibiotic susceptibility testing. Antibiotic levels were calculated by biologic assay from serum and tissue biopsies from the viable margins of the surgical site, which subsequently healed primarily or supported a split-thickness skin graft. Sixteen of the patients achieved therapeutic serum levels, and therapeutic tissue levels were reached in six patients at the time of surgery. A significantly lower number of patients had therapeutic tissue levels compared to serum levels (p less than 0.01, chi square). Initial intravenous antibiotic administration provides inadequate tissue concentrations for treating foot infections in patients with
diabetes
. Adequate serum antibiotic levels do not reflect therapeutic tissue antibiotic levels at the surgical margins in this group of patients.
...
PMID:Comparison of serum and tissue antibiotic levels in diabetes-related foot infections. 192 56
The article reviews the effect of
diabetes
on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of drugs in humans. For most drugs which cross the gastrointestinal wall by passive diffusion, oral absorption is unlikely to be affected by
diabetes
, although a delay in the absorption of tolazamide and a decrease in the extent of absorption of
ampicillin
have been reported. Subcutaneous absorption of insulin is more rapid in diabetic patients, whereas the intramuscular absorption of several drugs is slower. The binding of a number of drugs in the blood is reduced in
diabetes
, which may be due to glycosylation of plasma proteins or displacement by plasma free fatty acids, the level of which is increased in diabetic patients. Plasma concentrations of albumin and alpha 1-acid glycoprotein do not appear to be changed by the disease. The distribution of drugs with little or no binding in the blood is generally not altered, although the volume of distribution of phenazone (antipyrine) is reduced by 20% in insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM). In contrast to animal studies, the metabolic clearance of most drugs in humans appears to be unaffected or slightly reduced by the disease. The presence of fatty liver in non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM) may contribute to a reduced hepatic clearance, whereas decreased binding in the blood may cause an increase in clearance. The effect of
diabetes
on hepatic blood flow in humans appears to be unknown.
Diabetes
affects kidney function in a significant number of diabetic patients. During the first 10 years after the onset of the disease, glomerular filtration is elevated in these patients. Thus, the renal clearance of a number of antibiotics has been shown to be increased in diabetic children. As the disease progresses, renal function is impaired and glomerular function declines from the initial elevated state. In diabetic adults the renal clearance of drugs either is comparable with that found in nondiabetic individuals or is reduced. A limited number of studies have been conducted comparing the dose-response of cardiovascular drugs in diabetic patients with that in nondiabetic controls. Decreased, increased and unchanged responses have been reported. It is apparent that in some cases an altered response may be observed for a drug when administered to a diabetic patient compared with a similar nondiabetic individual. At the present time, it is not possible to ascertain whether these studies reflect true pharmacodynamic changes or merely alterations in pharmacokinetics.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:The effects of diabetes mellitus on pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics in humans. 204 31
Schemes for prevention and treatment of purulent inflammatory complications were developed on the basis of in vitro studies on antimicrobial activity of dioxidine and 7 beta-lactam antibiotics such as mezlocillin, carbenicillin,
ampicillin
, cefotaxime, cefoxitin, cefuroxime and cephalothin under conditions of aero- and anaerobiosis with an account of the isolated microflora, its sensitivity to antibacterial agents and conditions required for vital activity of obligate anaerobes in humans, i.e. decreased partial oxygen pressure, low oxidation-reduction potentials and high tissue concentrations of carbon dioxide. The use of dioxidine in combination with the antimicrobial drugs enabled one to decrease the number of cases with purulent inflammatory complications after large intestine esophagoplasty to 30.4 per cent against 67.5 per cent in the control group of the patients untreated preventively with the antibacterial drugs. The number of cases with similar complications after gastrectomy amounted to 16.1 per cent against 62 per cent in the control. The use of dioxidine+ in combination with
ampicillin
and cefotaxime in treatment of purulent necrotic affections of the foot in patients with
diabetes mellitus
enabled one to increase the number of satisfactory outcomes by 32 per cent, to decrease the number of high amputations by 21.9 per cent and to lower the number of deaths more than 2-fold as compared to the results in the control group of the patients subjected to chemotherapy based on sensitivity of the aerobic microflora alone.
...
PMID:[Efficacy of a combination of dioxidine with beta-lactam antibiotics in the prevention and treatment of purulent-inflammatory complications]. 212 33
Infections of the foot in the person with
diabetes
are the result of a complex myriad of pathophysiologic alterations. Neuropathy, vascular disease, and host immune alterations all interact to present a fertile ground for significant microbiologic invasion. When infection occurs, it is commonly due to a mixed flora of aerobic and anaerobic organisms, although "pure" aerobic or anaerobic infections are sometimes seen. Treatment of these infections requires a broad approach, including surgery, local care, and antibiotics. Most often, treatment against aerobic and anaerobic pathogens will be necessary. These infections can be divided into two categories based on clinical appearance. Severe life- or limb-threatening infections can present with massive cellulitis of the foot and leg, high fever, significantly elevated white blood count, septicemia, and tissue gas. Appropriate antibiotics in this setting include either combination or single-agent therapy. Imipenem/cilastatin offers coverage of all usual pathogens along with potentially lower toxicity and lower cost than combinations. Combinations containing clindamycin and aztreonam or ciprofloxacin may be useful for patients allergic to beta-lactam antibiotics. Less severe infections can usually be treated with a single-agent antibiotic such as ticarcillin/clavulanic acid or
ampicillin
/sulbactam. Cephalosporins with anaerobic activity, including cefoxitin, cefotaxime, and ceftizoxime, can be used in areas where enterococci are not a major problem.
...
PMID:Microbiology and antimicrobial therapy of diabetic foot infections. 220 47
Of 47 patients with Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteraemia admitted to the Hillbrow Hospital, Johannesburg during a period of 18 months, 31 were males and 16 were females. Features predisposing to illness were found in 89.4% patients, chronic alcoholism, neoplastic disease and
diabetes mellitus
being the most common. Twenty-five infections were acquired in hospital and 22 in the community. Most patients (59.6%) had pneumonia. All isolates of K. pneumoniae were resistant to
ampicillin
(100%); several (42.6%) were resistant to other antibiotics also. The overall mortality rate was 55.3%. A higher mean initial blood pressure and lower concentrations of serum urea and bilirubin were found in survivors. None of the 28 patients, surviving more than 48 h who received combined therapy with an aminoglycoside and a beta-lactam antibiotic (to which the organism was susceptible) died. Among the remaining patients treated with either an appropriate beta-lactam agent alone, an appropriate aminoglycoside alone or ciprofloxacin the combined mortality rate was 83.3% (P = 0.007).
...
PMID:Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteraemia at an urban general hospital. 240 58
A 60-year-old male with
diabetes mellitus
had Salmonella enteritidis bacteremia associated with mycotic aneurysm of the transverse aortic arc and myocarditis. Antibiotic therapy with
ampicillin
and chloramphenicol was ineffective despite the fact that the microorganism was sensitive in vitro to those antimicrobials, and the patient had a progressive clinical deterioration which culminated in death.
...
PMID:[Bacteremia associated with mycotic aneurysm of the transversal aortic arch and myocarditis caused by Salmonella enteritidis]. 249 Jun 76
We report a rare case of Klebsiella pneumoniae meningitis associated with liver abscess, which was successfully treated with cefotaxime (CTX), one of the third-generation cephalosporins. A 53-year-old man was admitted to Keio University Hospital on June 13, 1988, because of a fever and a headache. On June 3, he suddenly started shivering and his temperature rose to 39 degrees C. He then began to complain of polydipsia, polyuria, and a weight loss of 4 kg a week. On June 11, he developed a severe headache. Four years prior to this incident, he had been diagnosed as having
diabetes
after a routine medical examination, but had neglected to undergo medical treatment. On admission, laboratory data showed leukocytosis, hyperglycemia (394 mg/dl) and ketonuria (4+). A lumbar puncture yielded cloudy cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) containing 500/3 cells/mm8, of which about 70% were neutrophils. A diagnosis of diabetic ketoacidosis and purulent meningitis was made. A treatment with
ampicillin
(ABPC) and CTX, (12 g/day, each) was begun. On the third day, cultures of a blood specimen and CSF yielded both K. pneumoniae. The MICs of CTX to K. pneumoniae isolated from blood and CSF were both 0.05 microgram/ml. ABPC was discontinued, gentamicin was administered for 2 days, CTX was continued at the same dosage level and an administration of prednisolone 40 mg daily was begun.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Klebsiella pneumoniae meningitis associated with liver abscess: a case report]. 269 13
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