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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifteen male hemodialysis patients developed 21 episodes of S. aureus bacteremia.
Infections
involving vascular access were responsible for 65% of initial bacteremias. The arteriovenous fistula was the most prevalent type of access used, and thus was responsible for the majority of these illnesses. Phage typing indicated that recurrent episodes were due to reinfection rather than relapse. Complications included
endocarditis
, osteomyelitis, septic embolism, and pericarditis. One patient died of infectious complications. It is recommended that hemodialysis patients developing bacteremia due to S. aureus receive at least 6 weeks of beta lactamase-resistant antimicrobial therapy.
...
PMID:Staphylococcus aureus bacteremia in hemodialysis patients. 60 60
Group C streptococci are generally considered to be a rare cause of infection in man.
Infections
due to these microorganisms, however, are common in several animal species. To our knowledge, the literature contains only two previous cases of meningitis in man which were due to group C streptococci. In one of these cases meningitis developed as a complication of
endocarditis
due to group C streptococci. Our recent clinical experience with a patient with severe acute meningitis caused by group C streptococci is reported and the pertinent literature is reviewed. The illness manifested itself as a severe form of acute meningitis, with slow but statisfactory response to therapy with penicillin.
...
PMID:Meningitis due to group C streptococci in an adult. 68 81
A collection of 820 isolates of streptococci and aerococci from human blood or internal organs was classified by means of a set of cultural and biochemical tests. Of these, 719 (712 streptococci and 7 aerococci) were from patients believed to be suffering from a systemic infection:
endocarditis
317; a purulent lesion in an internal organ ("purulent disease") 152; bacteriaemia 250. The
endocarditis
streptococci included members of all recognisable taxa, but only certain of these were common: Streptococcus sanguis, 16-4%; dextran-positive and usually mannitol-fermenting strains of S. bovis (S. bovis I), 15-1%; S. mutans, 14-2%; S. mitior, 13-2%. Streptococci of the "alpha-haemolytic" taxa (S. sanguis, S. mitior and related strains) formed only 44-8% of the total. When the percentage frequency of streptococcal taxa among the
endocarditis
and "non-endocarditis" isolates was compared, the dextran-forming taxa (S. mutans, S. bovis I, S. sanguis, and dextran-positive streptococci otherwise resembling S. mitior) all had higher "endocarditis : non-endocarditis" ratios than did any of the non-dextran-producing taxa.
Endocarditis
increased in frequency with age, and showed an excess of males over females up to the age of 65 years. In young patients (less than 35 years), "alpha-haemolytic" streptococci predominated; with increasing age, the proportion of other streptococci increased progressively but the absolute numbers of isolations of "alpha-haemolytic" streptococci did not fall.
Infections
with S. mutans were prominent in the age-group 35-54 years and with S. bovis I at ages greater than or equal to 55 years. A history of previous heart disease was more often obtained in
endocarditis
due to "alpha-haemolytic" streptococci than in other streptococcal
endocarditis
. The streptococcus most often isolated from purulent lesions in internal organs was S. milleri (29-3%). It was associated with brain abscess, meningitis, pleural empyema and a variety of intra-abdominal abscesses. The only common predisposing factor in
endocarditis
was previous heart damage. In other systemic streptococcal diseases, other general or local predisposing causes could be observed, mainly in infections with the "pyogenic" groupable streptococci, the enterococci and S. milleri.
...
PMID:Streptococci and aerococci associated with systemic infection in man. 78
Diphtheroid
endocarditis
after aortic valve replacement was cured with penicillin, gentamycin and erythromycin.
Infections
occur most commonly on the aortic valves of men patients within two weeks after prosthetic insertion. Management with combined drug therapy based on sensitivities and clinical response are suggested. Paravalvular leaks do not necessarily require valve replacement.
...
PMID:Diphtheroid endocarditis after aortic valve replacement. 80 99
The internationally accepted term septicaemia is used to describe illnesses in which pathogenic microorganisms are present in the blood. Septicaemia should be defined according to the causative organism, the portal of entry and the underlying disease. In the last 16 years the causative organisms in 788 cases of septicaemia in our hospital were found to be gram-positive cocci in 28.1% gram-negative rods in 37.6%, and other organisms in 24.i%.
Infections
with Psuedomonas in particular have become more frequent in recent years. The range of causative organisms in septicaemia varies considerably with the patient groups involved. Thus patients with myeloid insufficiency contracted primarily gram-negative septicaemia. As in the past, the pathogens in
endocarditis
today are primarily streptococci. In hemodialysis staphylococci and gram-negative rods are shown to occur with equal frequency. The most important clinical manifestation of septicaemia is fever with rigor. The poor prognosis in gram-negative septicaemia is mainly due to the onset of septic shock. Skin colonisation is often a typical sign of septicaemia and can also sometimes serve as a diagnostic indication. Hemorrhagic pustules surrounded by a zone of inflammation are typical in septicaemia caused by meningococci or gonococci. Skin eruptions are rare in septicaemia caused by streptococci of staphylococci. Whereas skin eruptions are absent in septicaemia due to enterobacteria, they are very often present in septicaemia caused by Pseudomonas. In bacterial endocarditis a wide variety of skin lesions can occur.
...
PMID:[Clinical study of septicaemia (author's transl)]. 101 83
Immediate attention must be given to the respiratory system of the heroin abuser; then he should be given naloxone HCl. Search for evidence of use of additional drugs, which may compound problems. Pulmonary edema, aspiration pneumonia and pulmonary embolization are the most common complications.
Infections
, particularly
endocarditis
, and cardiac arrhythmia also occur with heroin overdose. Hepatitis is common. Treatment must include not only attention to the presenting symptoms but also referral to a rehabilitation center when possible.
...
PMID:Treating heroin overdose. 112 10
Infections
with enterococci that are resistant to multiple antibiotics are an emerging clinical problem. We evaluated the antibiotic treatment of experimental enterococcal
endocarditis
caused by two strains with different mechanisms of penicillin resistance. Enterococcus faecalis HH-22 is resistant to aminoglycosides and penicillin on the basis of plasmid-mediated modifying enzymes; Enterococcus raffinosus SF-195 is susceptible to aminoglycosides but is resistant to penicillin on the basis of low-affinity penicillin-binding proteins. Animals infected with strain HH-22 received 5 days of treatment with the following: no treatment; daptomycin (20 mg/kg of body weight twice daily [b.i.d.], intramuscularly [i.m.]), vancomycin (20 mg/kg b.i.d., intravenously), or ampicillin (100 mg/kg three times daily, i.m.) plus gentamicin (2.5 mg/kg b.i.d. i.m.). Although vancomycin was superior to ampicillin-gentamicin (P less than 0.01), daptomycin was significantly better than all other treatment regimens (P less than 0.01) in reducing intravegetation enterococcal densities, although no vegetations were rendered culture negative by this agent. Animals infected with strain SF-195 received 5 days of no therapy, ampicillin, ampicillin-gentamicin, vancomycin, or daptomycin (all at the dosage regimens described above). Daptomycin, vancomycin, and ampicillin-gentamicin each lowered intravegetation enterococcal densities significantly better than did ampicillin monotherapy or no treatment (P less than 0.01); moreover, these three treatment regimens rendered significantly more vegetations culture negative than did ampicillin monotherapy or no treatment (P less than 0.05). Serum daptomycin levels remained above the MICs and MBCs for both enterococcal strains throughout the 12-h dosing interval used in the study. Daptomycin and vancomycin were both active in vivo in these models of experimental enterococcal
endocarditis
caused by penicillin-resistant strains, irrespective of the mechanism of resistance. This activity correlated with the unique cell wall sites of action of these agents (binding to lipoteichoic acid and pentapeptide precursor, respectively) compared with the sites of action of beta-lactams (penicillin-binding proteins). Beta-Lactamase production by strain HH-22 precluded in vivo efficacy with ampicillin-gentamicin combinations. In contrast, this combination was active in vivo against strain SF-195, which exhibited intermediate-level penicillin resistance (MIC, 32 micrograms/ml), likely reflecting the ability of high-dose ampicillin to achieve enough binding to low-affinity penicillin-binding proteins to cause augmented aminoglycoside uptake.
...
PMID:Comparison of daptomycin, vancomycin, and ampicillin-gentamicin for treatment of experimental endocarditis caused by penicillin-resistant enterococci. 132 32
Sixty-three cases of monomicrobial enterococcal infections treated with teicoplanin in two open clinical studies in Europe from 1982 to 1989 are presented.
Infections
were documented as
endocarditis
(n = 18); septicemia (n = 8); and urinary tract (n = 29), skin/soft-tissue (n = 6), or bone/joint (n = 2) infections. A total of 63 enterococcal strains were isolated; all of 29 strains tested were susceptible to teicoplanin (geometric mean MIC, 0.16 micrograms/mL; range, 0.06-0.5 micrograms/mL). Forty-eight patients were treated with teicoplanin alone and 15 were treated with teicoplanin in combination with an aminoglycoside. The rate of clinical cure was 84.1%; 4.8% of patients clinically improved, 7.9% had clinical recurrence, and 3.2% did not respond to therapy. Bacteriologic eradication was observed in 87.2% of patients; persistence, in 3.2%; recurrence, in 3.2%; and reinfection, in 4.8%. One case was not evaluable bacteriologically. Of 18 patients with
endocarditis
, 15 were cured with a mean daily dose of 5.4 mg/kg--six with monotherapy and nine with combination therapy. All patients with urinary tract infections were treated with monotherapy, and 89.7% were cured (mean daily dose, 4.6 mg/kg). Lower rates of clinical cure and bacteriologic eradication were observed in septicemic patients without
endocarditis
(62.5%). This study demonstrated a good efficacy of teicoplanin for the treatment of enterococcal infections due to susceptible strains, but further clinical studies would be useful for establishing optimal dosage and the indications for combination therapy, especially for severe infections.
...
PMID:Efficacy of teicoplanin for enterococcal infections: 63 cases and review. 138 8
A single strain of Staphylococcus epidermidis caused an outbreak of postoperative wound infections and
endocarditis
during a 6-month period.
Infections
caused by the epidemic strain developed more frequently in valve surgery patients than in those undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery (P = .03) and occurred only in patients operated on by surgeon A. None of 17 members of the cardiac surgery team carried the epidemic strain in their anterior nares, axillae, or inguinal folds. Hand cultures were performed on 8 surgical personnel, and only surgeon A carried the epidemic strain on his hands. Isolates from cardiac surgery patients, bypass pump blood cultures, and the hands of the implicated surgeon all had identical antimicrobial susceptibility patterns, plasmid profiles, and EcoRI restriction endonuclease digest patterns. In the 24 months after control measures were implemented, no infections caused by the epidemic strain occurred among open heart surgery patients. The findings suggest that the common-source outbreak of infections among cardiac surgery patients was due to carriage of a strain S. epidermidis on the hands of a cardiac surgeon.
...
PMID:A common-source outbreak of Staphylococcus epidermidis infections among patients undergoing cardiac surgery. 217 23
Optimal therapy of infections caused by borderline oxacillin-susceptible, beta-lactamase-hyperproducing Staphylococcus aureus has not been established. We used a rat model of aortic valve
endocarditis
to examine efficacies of antibiotic regimens against a borderline oxacillin-susceptible strain as compared with a fully susceptible S. aureus strain. Animals were treated with oxacillin alone or in combination with sulbactam or with ampicillin-sulbactam combinations at two dose levels.
Infections
caused by the borderline susceptible and fully susceptible strains responded equally well to oxacillin alone, with residual bacterial titers in vegetations falling to 4.8 +/- 1.6 and 4.4 +/- 1.7 (mean +/- standard deviation) log10 CFU/g, respectively. Addition of sulbactam to oxacillin (1:2) did not enhance the efficacy of oxacillin against either strain in the animal model. A high-dose regimen of ampicillin-sulbactam (2:1) yielding mean (+/- standard deviation) levels in serum of 16.8 +/- 7.4 and 9.5 +/- 1.1 micrograms/ml, respectively, proved equally effective against both strains (bacterial titers, 6.6 log10 CFU/g). However, at lower doses (8.3 +/- 2.6 and 5.9 +/- 2.4 micrograms/ml, the combination showed greater efficacy against the fully susceptible strain, with residual titers of 7.1 +/- 2.0 versus 9.0 +/- 1.6 log10 CFU/g (P less than 0.05). In vitro studies revealed that the beta-lactamase inhibitor sulbactam was also a potent inducer of staphylococcal beta-lactamase at clinically relevant concentrations. Based on this short-term in vivo therapy study, oxacillin would be predicted to be clinically effective in the therapy of infections caused by borderline oxacillin-susceptible strains of S. aureus, while the combination of ampicillin with sulbactam appears to be inferior to oxacillin alone against such infections.
...
PMID:Efficacy of oxacillin and ampicillin-sulbactam combination in experimental endocarditis caused by beta-lactamase-hyperproducing Staphylococcus aureus. 236 Aug 13
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