Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (endocarditis)
15,629 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Clinical features of 99 patients with staphylococcal infection were reviewed, and sera were tested by solid-phase radioimmunoassay and gel diffusion for staphylococcal antibodies to ascertain whether these variables predict the extent of infection and the need for prolonged therapy. Clinical features, including the presence of a primary site of infection or a continuous pattern of bacteremia, were not sufficient for differentiating endocarditis or complicated bacteremia from uncomplicated bacteremia. Patients with uncomplicated bacteremia were cured by 3 weeks of antibiotic therapy. Positive serologic tests for staphylococcal antibody helped distinguish patients with endocarditis or complicated bacteremia from patients with uncomplicated bacteremia. Radioimmunoassay was more sensitive than gel diffusion for identifying patients with complicated bacteremia. Our results indicate that patients with a positive antibody result 14 days after the onset of infection should be considered to have endocarditis or complicated bacteremia, but a negative antibody result would support short-term antibiotic therapy.
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PMID:Solid-phase radioimmunoassay for immunoglobulin G Staphylococcus aureus antibody in serious staphylococcal infection. 10 30

Gel-diffusion and the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) were used to quantify and to identify the immunoglobulin class of teichoic acid antibodies in patients with chronic staphylococcal osteomyelitis and a wide variety of other infections. Teichoic acid antibodies were identified by gel-diffusion in 14 of 23 patients with staphylococcal endocarditis, six of 30 with staphylococcal bacteremia without endocarditis, four of 35 with staphylococcal skeletal infections, and one of 45 with nonstaphylococcal infections. None of the 20 patients with chronic staphylococcal osteomyelitis had positive gel-diffusion assays, even though many had had their infections for several years. The ELISA method was more sensitive than gel-diffusion in measuring teichoic acid antibodies, but was also much less specific. Teichoic acid antibodies were detected predominantly in the IgG fraction of serum. Our findings suggest that the presence and degree of antigenemia are more important than the duration of the staphylococcal infection in stimulating production of teichoic acid antibodies.
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PMID:Teichoic acid antibodies in chronic staphylococcal osteomyelitis. 10 31

Serious infections caused by organisms of the genus Bacillus developed in seven patients. Five drug abusers had either endocarditis or osteomyelitis, one leukemic patient had necrotizing fasciitis, and one patient had a ventriculoatrial shunt infection with recurrent bacteremia. All patients recovered. Experience with these cases reemphasizes the importance of not dismissing Bacillus organisms as culture contaminants, especially when isolated from blood, body fluids, or closed-space infections.
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PMID:Serious infections from Bacillus sp. 10 58

Bacillus bacteremias occurred in two heroin addicts. The first patient had one day of fever and chills after intravenous heroin use. Persistent cereus bacteremia consistent with endocarditis was documented and responded to four weeks of antibiotic therapy. The second patient had non-cereus Bacillus species isolated from blood cultures three times over eight days, each time after renewed heroin use. The patient remained well, and the bacteremias cleared spontaneously. Because Bacillus species frequently contaminate heroin injection materials and because the Bacillus bacteremias were temporally associated with intravenous heroin use, Bacillus bacteremias in both patients probably eventuated from heroin abuse. These cases, in conjunction with two previously reported cases of Bacillus endocarditis in heroin addicts, suggest that heroin addicts are at risk for developing Bacillus bacteremias, which may vary in severity from endocarditis to benign transient bacteremias.
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PMID:The spectrum of Bacillus bacteremias in heroin addicts. 10 84

Rabbits with intracardiac catheters were immunized with heat-killed Pseudomonas aeruginosa or saline and challenged with either 10(9) (high inoculum) or 10(7) (low inoculum) pseudomonas. Immunization did not decrease the incidence of endocarditis when compared with controls, but it did significantly prolong survival. The longer survival of immunized rabbits after high-inoculum challenge was not due to prolongation of the course of endocarditis but to type-specific protection from early, overwhelming bacteremia. However, after low-inoculum challenge there were no early deaths and there was a significantly (P < 0.01) longer survival of immunized (17.4 days) than unimmunized (10.6 days) animals dying of endocarditis. Increased survival was associated with higher total and 2-mercaptoethanol-resistant hemagglutinating antibody titers 1 week after challenge in immunized as compared with unimmunized rabbits. Early (48 h after challenge) vegetation colonization was also significantly (P < 0.05) greater after type-specific as opposed to non-type-specific or saline immunization and low-inoculum challenge. However, whereas 67% of type-specifically immunized rabbits had colonized vegetations at 48 h, only 38.9% died with bacteremic endocarditis. Another 19.2% of immunized rabbits had vegetations colonized with > 10(5) colony-forming units of pseudomonas at elective sacrifice 2 weeks after challenge but no bacteremia; no unimmunized rabbit exhibited similar late colonization. Preexisting antibody may be important in the pathogenesis of pseudomonas endocarditis in drug addicts, and its presence may explain the subacute and often protracted course of the disease.
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PMID:Effect of type-specific active immunization on the development and progression of experimental Pseudomonas aeruginosa endocarditis. 11 Jun 89

Staphylococcal bacteremia occurs frequently in patients undergoing long-term hemodialysis (dialysis patients). Although such bacteremia is frequently uncomplicated, it may be associated with endocarditis, metastatic infection or suppuration at the access site requiring excision of the access device for control of the infection (complicated bacteremia). To distinguish patients with uncomplicated bacteremia from those with complications, we measured staphylococcal teichoic acid antibodies by agar-gel diffusion and immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies by radioimmunoassay in 18 patients with staphylococcal bacteremia undergoing long-term hemodialysis. Although teichoic acid antibodies were not detected in five patients with uncomplicated bacteremia, they were observed in only three of 13 patients with complicated bacteremia. IgG staphylococcal antibodies were present in 10 of 13 patients with complicated bacteremia compared to none of five patients with uncomplicated bacteremia compared to none of five patients with uncomplicated bacteremia (p less than 0.05). Thus, radioimmunoassay was spuerior to agar-gel diffusion in identifying dialysis patients with complicated bacteremia. In patients with increased concentrations of IgG staphylococcal antibodies by radioimmunoassay, the diagnosis of endocarditis, metastatic infection and suppuration at the access site should be considered. Prolonged antibiotic therapy and/or operative removal of the access device may be necessary.
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PMID:Serologic diagnosis of access device-related staphylococcal bacteremia. 11 13

Although hyperthermia is a component of many endocrine diseases, it is uncommon for fever to be the presenting manifestation of hormonal disorders. During a four year period we encountered six patients, hospitalized principally because of fever, who were found to have endocrine causes for the fever. In all, the admitting diagnosis was infection; three were suspected of having tuberculosis, two of gram-negative bacteremia and one of endocarditis. Except for asymptomatic bacteriuria in one patient (who remained febrile despite appropriate antibiotic therapy) infection was ruled out in all cases, and fever was attributed to "masked" thyrotoxicosis, triiodothyronine (T3) toxicosis, subacute thyroiditis, primary adrenal insufficiency, secondary adrenal insufficiency and pheochromocytoma. In a seventh patient, extreme pyrexia developed in the setting of the thyroid storm. The importance of hormonal mechanisms in thermoregulation is discussed.
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PMID:Hormonal hyperthermia: endocrinologic causes of fever. 21 48

Two children with persistent bacteremia and endocarditis due to Staphylococcus aureus failed to respond to vancomycin therapy, even though serum levels greatly exceeded the inhibitory concentrations. The Staphylococcus from one patient was resistant to methicillin; the other patient had a penicillin hypersensitivity. There was a wide disparity between the minimum inhibitory and the minimum bactericidal concentrations of vancomycin. Striking clinical and laboratory evidence of improvement was demonstrated with the addition of rifampin therapy.
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PMID:Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis. Combined therapy with vancomycin and rifampin. 24 93

The efficacy of nafcillin and gentamicin used alone and in combination at doses giving serum concentrations comparable to those achieved in patients was studied in rabbits with experimental Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis. The organism used was a penicillinase-producing, methicillin-susceptible, clinical isolate. The addition of gentamicin to nafcillin significantly increased the rate of killing of organisms in valvular vegetations, compared to the effect of nafcillin alone. Gentamicin alone delayed mortality but was not effective in reducing the bacterial populations of the vegetations. Bacteremia persisted in the animals treated with gentamicin alone, in contrast to the groups treated with nafcillin or the combination. Selection of a subpopulation of aminoglycoside-resistant small-colony variants occurred in animals treated with gentamicin alone. This variant was subsequently employed in the rabbit model and produced endocarditis, metastatic infection, and bacteremia comparable to those caused by the parent strain. Animals with infection produced by the variant died later than animals infected by the parent strain. Nafcillin was equally effective in reducing the population of both parent and variant strains in vitro and in therapy of the infected animals. Population studies showed the variant to be a mutant emerging at a rate of 1.9 x 10(-7). It was shown to differ from the parent strain in coagulase and hemolysin production, colonial morphology, and aminoglycoside susceptibility, but was similar by light and electron microscopy and in phage type, pigmentation of colonies, deoxyribonuclease production, mannitol fermentation, and growth rate.
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PMID:Single and combination antibiotic therapy of Staphylococcus aureus experimental endocarditis: emergence of gentamicin-resistant mutants. 25 Oct 69

Two cases of bacterial endocarditis caused by Haemophilus parainfluenzae are reported with a review of 33 other cases of H. parainfluenzae endocarditis and 5 cases of H. influenzae endocarditis. Although H. parainfluenzae is usually considered a non-pathogenic microorganism, this review firmly establishes its role as a causative agent in endocarditis. Furthermore, several clinical features were noted which were atypical when compared to findings usually present in patients with bacterial endocarditis. The mean age of the patients was only 27 years. Over 60% of the patients had no identifiable predisposing illness, an unexpected finding in view of the low degree of pathogenicity associated with this microorganism. Polymicrobial bacteremia, usually with viridans streptococci, was found in 11% of patients. Major arterial emboli were documented in 57% of patients, an incidence unchanged from the pre-antibiotic era. Diagnosis of the disease is dependent upon an awareness of the fastidious cultural requirements necessary for isolation of Haemophilus species. Culture media must contain a source of X and V factors. Mortality from H. parainfluenzae endocarditis has been reduced from 100 per cent prior to 1940 to about 12 per cent by use of appropriate antimicrobial agents. Awareness that Haemophilus species can cause bacterial endocarditis is important because the diagnosis is dependent upon utilization of special culture methods and the patient may not respond to some of the empiric regimens used for treating bacterial endocarditis. It should be especially considered as a possible cause of "culture-negative" or "abacteremic" endocarditis.
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PMID:Haemophilus parainfluenzae and influenzae endocarditis: a review of forty cases. 32 16


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