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The group G streptococcus has surfaced in the past 10 to 15 years as an important opportunistic and nosocomial pathogen. Although more precise organism recognition accounts for a portion of these cases, there can be little doubt that the group G streptococcus has become a more prevalent pathogen. Commercial kits, utilizing staphylococcal coagglutination or latex agglutination, are now available, affording all clinical laboratories the opportunity to identify this organism easily. Published reviews encompassing the experiences of a single institution or even several institutions affiliated with a single medical center, particularly as they were influenced by referral patterns, did not reflect the broad scope of infections that we discovered by extending our survey into the community, beyond the medical center complex and its immediate affiliated hospitals. Although malignancy is the single most obvious background factor, alcoholism and diabetes are also important host determinants of infection. Skin and soft-tissue infections (and surface sources of infection) are equally important among patients with or without the element of malignancy. Polymicrobial infection, including polymicrobial bacteremia, is an important feature, with S. aureus infections accounting for most of these cases, relating to the skin and soft tissue sources of infections so commonly seen. We saw a panorama of problems including endocarditis, septic arthritis, pleuropulmonary infections, bone and joint infections, puerperal sepsis and neonatal infection, peritonitis and ophthalmitis; we also saw a significant number of patients with bacteremia and no apparent primary source of infection. Response to antibiotic therapy was dictated by the nature of the underlying diseases, and individuals without a background of malignant disease did well, particularly those with skin and soft-tissue infections. While the literature suggests that patients with endocarditis and septic arthritis due to this organism respond poorly to antibiotic therapy, implying that such failures relate to in vitro antibiotic phenomena, we preferred to examine the problem from the viewpoint of the host(s) involved. Subacute endocarditis and acute endocarditis due to the group G streptococcus may be clinically separable, and thus require separate therapeutic approaches. In patients with septic arthritis, prosthetic devices, prior joint disease and immunosuppressive diseases and therapy often adversely influence the response to antibiotic therapy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Infections due to Lancefield group G streptococci. 397 42

Clinical features and immune status have been studied in seven previously healthy children with disseminated staphylococcal disease. Six of seven patients had a history of a viral-type illness before developing disseminated staphylococcal disease. Five patients had a petechial rash. Endocarditis occurred in three patients, two of whom had a cerebral embolism. All seven patients had an abnormal urinary sediment, and in two it was suggestive of glomerulonephritis. Two had transient renal failure. Three patients had evidence of pneumonia, one of the three developed pneumatoceles and one developed a pleural effusion. Four had osteomyelitis and/or septic arthritis. All patients had a transient abnormality of intracellular bacterial killing by neutrophils. One patient died. Three patients have residual valvular heart disease; one of the three patients has weakness of one arm and another has a seizure disorder. Cellular and humoral immunity in all six surviving patients is normal. We speculate that an antecedent viral infection temporarily suppressed neutrophil function and predisposed these children to secondary and severe staphylococcal disease.
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PMID:Clinical features and abnormal neutrophil function in disseminated staphylococcal disease. 398 77

Kingella kingae is a fastidious gram-negative rod related to the Neisseriae. Together with data from published cases of K. kingae infection, we report the clinical and laboratory findings from 10 cases in western Sweden; a specific serological reaction is also described. The diagnoses were osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, discitis, endocarditis, occult bacteraemia and phlegmon. The data from the Swedish cases, together with those from previous reports in the literature provided the basis for an analysis of a total of 33 cases, ranging from self-limiting to potentially fatal infections. In orthopaedic infections (n = 19), including 3 cases of discitis, the course was usually protracted but subacute and benign, although the full-blown, acute septic arthritis was also encountered. Endocarditis (n = 10) was characterized by a stormy clinical course and the development of significant sequelae. The majority of the patients were previously healthy children. 42% of them had a current or recent upper respiratory tract infection. After start of antibiotic treatment patients were afebrile within a few days. Betalactam antibiotics should be regarded as the drugs of choice for coping with K. kingae. We stress the insidious course of skeletal infections in children and urge the importance of early puncture of a suspected focus to establish a correct diagnosis without delay. The clinical data suggest that K. kingae should be regarded as a significant pathogen.
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PMID:Kingella kingae infections: a review and a presentation of data from 10 Swedish cases. 405 64

A 20-year-old woman was found to have septic arthritis of the hip due to Aerococcus viridans. This organism closely resembles Streptococcus viridans, but forms gram positive tetrads rather than chains in broth media. The organism has been reported rarely to cause endocarditis and one case of osteomyelitis has been observed. To our knowledge septic arthritis due to Aerococcus viridans has not been previously reported.
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PMID:Septic arthritis due to Aerococcus viridans. 408 48

From 1976 to 1981, 25 cases of S. pyogenes septicemia were diagnosed at the University Medical Center, Lausanne, Switzerland, in 5 children and 20 adults. The twenty adult patients are described. The age range was from 24 to 94 years. The portal of entry was the skin (erysipelas, skin ulcers, surgical wounds) in 12 cases, the respiratory tract (upper 3, lower 3) in 6 cases, and the vagina in 2 cases. All except 3 patients were acutely ill with high temperature (39 degrees C) and toxic appearance. None had an underlying malignancy. The clinical course was complicated in 5 patients, i.e. septic arthritis (2), pulmonary abscess (1), endocarditis (1) and acute rheumatic fever (1). After initiation of penicillin therapy, temperature and symptoms resolved only slowly (mean 11 days). Four patients died from infection. In 2 of them the antibiotic treatment had been delayed. When a patient exhibits clinical signs of septicemia and muco-cutaneous lesions suggestive of a portal of entry, S. pyogenes septicemia should be suspected. Complications are frequent and the prognosis remains poor despite early adequate antibiotic treatment.
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PMID:[Streptococcus (S. pyogenes) group A septicemia. Analysis of 20 cases in adults]. 633 81

Four cases of endocarditis due to Kingella kingae are described in compromised patients. All had primary heart disease, and two had systemic lupus erythematosis and congenital heart defect respectively, in addition. Confirmation of Kingella kingae was made in one case at autopsy. The literature on 11 cases of endocarditis, 2 bacteremia, 4 osteomyelitis, 5 septic arthritis and 1 intervertebral disc infection, all caused by Kingella kingae, is reviewed. Our findings confirm that the organism is of low pathogenicity. Children may be predisposed to infection with Kingella kingae.
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PMID:Endocarditis due to Kingella kingae. 646 70

All episodes of bacteremia occurring in pediatric practice (birth to age 17) in the major hospitals of one metropolitan area between 1977 and 1981 were analyzed to determine current patterns of bacteremia and associated mortality. The overall mortality for 713 episodes of bacteremia was 13.6%. However, mortality attributed specifically to bacteremia, according to the criteria used in this study, was only 7.6%. Thirty-four of the 54 deaths attributed to bacteremia occurred in the neonatal period. Five deaths were attributed to bacteremia during the second and third years of life, and only three deaths were attributed to bacteremia in patients between 3 and 16 years of age. No deaths were attributed to bacteremia arising from the following sources: otitis media, osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, skin infections, endocarditis, urinary tract infection or infection clearly due to vascular access devices.
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PMID:Patterns of bacteremia in pediatrics practice: factors affecting mortality rates. 647 33

Serious infections due to group G streptococci have been infrequently reported. Fifteen such cases are described. Endovascular infection, particularly endocarditis, and septic arthritis were the most common clinical syndromes observed. Despite exquisite in vitro sensitivity of group G streptococci to penicillin G, the in vivo clinical response was disappointing in six of nine patients with either endocarditis or septic arthritis. The group G streptococcal isolates from the patients in this study were uniformly sensitive to the inhibitory and killing action of penicillin G, ampicillin, cefotaxime, cephalothin, cefoxitin, and vancomycin. In contrast, clindamycin, erythromycin, and chloramphenicol had relatively poor bactericidal activity against these strains, including several "tolerant" strains. Timed-kill studies with penicillin G revealed impaired killing of group G streptococci at in vitro conditions of high inocula and stationary growth phases. This may partially explain the poor clinical responses in cases of group G streptococcal endocarditis.
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PMID:Serious infections due to group G streptoccocci. Report of 15 cases with in vitro-in vivo correlations. 655 4

The effects of a home care program with 102 courses (2336 patient-days) of intravenous antibiotic therapy were evaluated. Home care nurses changed the intravenous cannula site every 3 days. The initial hospital stay averaged 11.8 days and the duration of home therapy averaged 22.9 days. The diseases treated included osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, endocarditis, cystic fibrosis and pneumonia, staphylococcal bacteremia, blastomycosis, actinomycosis and other soft tissue infections. All classes of commonly used antibiotics, including penicillins, cephalosporins, aminoglycosides and amphotericin B, were administered, alone or in combination. There were no side effects that necessitated discontinuation of home treatment or readmission to hospital. The average cost per patient-day was $58, compared with an estimated $193 for in-hospital therapy; in addition, 2336 hospital bed-days were made available. Most patients were able to resume many or all of their daily activities while receiving intravenous antibiotic therapy.
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PMID:Self-administration of intravenous antibiotics: an efficient, cost-effective home care program. 680 5

Fusobacterium necrophorum septicemia developed in five patients after an oropharyngeal infection. Four patients had sore throat or neck pain, and two had findings of jugular vein septic thrombophlebitis. Metastatic abscesses, including embolic pneumonia, empyema, septic arthritis, and osteomyelitis, also occurred. Four patients recovered and one died. Proper treatment requires recognition of the oropharyngeal source of the septicemia and its differentiation from endocarditis. Antibiotic therapy should be prolonged, and metastatic abscesses drained.
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PMID:Fusobacterium necrophorum septicemia following oropharyngeal infection. 695 28


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