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)

Brain abscess is a focal infection of the brain due to contiguous spread of pathogens following otitis, sinusitis, neurosurgery or traumatic brain injury or through hematogenous dissemination. Classical symptoms consisting of headache, fever, and focal signs may be absent on admission and brain MRI with contrast plays a major role in diagnosis. Initial management consists of stereotactic aspiration for microbiological documentation empirical treatment covering common pathogens, including oral streptococci, staphylococci, anaerobes, and Enterobacteriaceae. De-escalation of antimicrobials based on microbiology is safe only when samples have been processed optimally, or when primary diagnosis is endocarditis. A 6-week combination of third-generation cephalosporin and metronidazole will cure most cases of community-acquired brain abscess in immunocompetent adults. Significant advent in brain imaging, minimally invasive surgery, molecular biology, and antibacterial agents, has dramatically improved the prognosis. Main indicators of outcome include altered mental status at presentation and intraventricular rupture.
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PMID:Brain abscess in immunocompetent adult patients. 3144 60

Aggregatibacter aphrophilus and Beta haemolytic Streptococci Lancefield group F are part of the normal oral flora and are known to cause endocarditis, sinusitis, empyema, meningitis and septic arthritis. They are now emerging as a cause of brain abscess particularly in patients with congenital heart diseases. We report a case of a 10-year-old boy with Tetralogy of Fallot (TOF), who presented with fever, headache and drowsiness. Culture yielded the growth of Aggregatibacter aphrophilus and Beta hemolytic streptococci Lancefield group F. He became clinically stable after treatment with ceftriaxone.
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PMID:Polymicrobial Cerebral Abscess in a Child with Uncorrected Tetralogy of Fallot. 3151 31

Streptococcus species are common causes of human infection. These Gram-positive, encapsulated bacterial pathogens infect diverse anatomic spaces, leading to infections including skin and soft tissue infection, endocarditis, pneumonia, meningitis, sinusitis, otitis media, chorioamnionitis, sepsis, and even death. Risk for streptococcal infection is highest in low- and middle-income countries where micronutrient deficiency is common. Epidemiological data reveal that vitamin D deficiency is associated with enhanced risk of streptococcal infection and cognate disease outcomes. Additionally, vitamin D improves antibacterial defenses by stimulating innate immune processes such as phagocytosis and enhancing production of reactive oxygen species (oxidative burst) and antimicrobial peptides (including cathelicidin and lactoferrin), which are important for efficient killing of bacteria. This review presents the most recent published work that studies interactions between the micronutrient vitamin D, the host immune system, and pathogenic streptococci as well as comparisons with other relevant infection models.
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PMID:Vitamin D and Streptococci: The Interface of Nutrition, Host Immune Response, and Antimicrobial Activity in Response to Infection. 3317 Jun 52


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