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

Diphtheroid endocarditis is a rare disease. A large proportion of the reported cases have occurred in the presence of prosthetic heart valves. Nine previously unreported cases of diphtheroid endocarditis are discussed along with 25 others taken from the literature. Eight out of the nine new cases occurred in patients with artificial heart valves. A high mortality was associated with infections occurring on prosthetic heart valves. Microbiological studies were frequently hampered by poor in vitro growth of the organisms. Resistance to penicillin and cephalothin was common. Erythromycin or penicillin in combination with streptomycin is suggested as a rational initial treatment for diphtheroid endocarditis involving prosthetic heart valves to be used until adequate in vitro antibiotic susceptibility testing is completed. Long-term suppressive therapy is suggested for those patients who are poor surgical candidates and for those patients who relapse after a reasonable course of antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Diphtheroid endocarditis. Report of nine cases and review of the literature. 82 34

The ability of antibiotics to prevent Streptococcus sanguis endocarditis was tested in rabbits. Only vancomycin or a combination of penicillin G plus streptomycin always prevented infection when administered as a single dose. A loading dose of 30 mg/kg of phenoxymethyl penicillin (penicillin V) followed by additional 7.5 mg/kg doses for 48 h proved to be the only successful prophylactic program that could be given orally to man. Cefazolin alone or with streptomycin in multiple doses was also an effective alternative to penicillin or penicillin derivatives. Erythromycin uniformly failed to protect animals from bacterial endocarditis but showed greater prophylactic efficacy when a low inoculum of streptococci was used.
...
PMID:Chemotherapy of experimental streptococcal endocarditis. IV. Further observations on prophylaxis. 115 Aug 74

In the U.K. and Europe there are now simple oral chemoprophylaxis recommendations which are likely to be widely complied with by patients, dental and medical practitioners. The main recommendations of the 1982 BSAC Endocarditis Working Party report and the 1985 report of the European Society of Cardiology are similar and involve the administration of a single 3 g dose of oral amoxycillin 1 h before the procedure, or two doses of erythromycin for patients allergic to penicillin. Amoxycillin is more suitable than penicillin V for single dose chemoprophylaxis because of its higher and more persistent serum bactericidal concentrations and lower serum protein binding compared with penicillin V. Controversies about the precautions needed for patients with prosthetic valves are discussed. Erythromycin is associated with more frequent gastrointestinal side-effects and less reliable absorption than amoxycillin. None the less, recent studies suggest that the 1.5 g loading dose of oral erythromycin stearate has an 'immediate' effect in reducing post-extraction streptococcal bacteraemia and appears to be reasonably well tolerated by most adults. In 1986 a few changes have been suggested by the BSAC Endocarditis Working Party and concern the use of alternative oral amoxycillin regimens for patients requiring general anaesthesia, the giving of two administrations of amoxycillin within one month when prophylaxis is required for repeated dental procedures and the slower infusion of intravenous vancomycin to reduce the incidence of adverse reactions. A register of cases of failed chemoprophylaxis' has been started in the U.K. and also in Europe.
...
PMID:Antibiotic prophylaxis of infective endocarditis in the United Kingdom and Europe. 311 57

Penicillin G administered parenterally or penicillin V administered orally are currently the antibiotics of choice for treatment of dental infections of usual etiology. Infections caused by penicillinase-producing staphylococci or those involving gram-negative bacteria should be treated with a penicillinase-resistant penicillin or an ampicillin-like derivative, respectively. Erythromycin is a second-choice bacteriostatic antibiotic, becoming first choice for treating dental infections in patients allergic to penicillin. The cephalosporins, similar in action to ampicillin-like penicillin derivatives, may be used with caution in patients who have exhibited delayed-type allergic reactions to penicillin and when erythromycin cannot be used. Their lack of advantage over other agents, and their cost, precludes routine use for usual dental infections. Clindamycin administered orally or lincomycin administered parenterally are reserve antibiotics indicated for treatment of bone infections and/or anaerobic infections refractory to commonly used antibiotics. Tetracyclines are, at best, third-choice agents for usual dental infections. However, they are useful for cases of acute necrotizing ulcerative gingivitis requiring systemic antibiotic therapy when penicillin is precluded. Vancomycin and streptomycin are used prophylactically for prevention of infective endocarditis in patients with prosthetic heart valves. Nystatin remains a first-choice agent for treatment of oral candidal infections. Ketoconazole, an orally active systemic antifungal agent, may be used for monilial infections of the oral cavity refractory to nystatin. Chemotherapy of viral infections is difficult because of the timing of events of the disease process versus appearance of clinical symptoms and lack of effective agents with selective toxicity. Herpes infections of the oral cavity have been treated--with limited success--with idoxuridine. Acyclovir, a newer antiviral drug, offers little clinical benefit for herpes infections in usually healthy patients but may be of value for treating such infections in immunocompromised patients. All antimicrobial agents may cause adverse reactions of varying degrees of severity. Most orally administered antibiotics may cause gastrointestinal disturbances. Superinfections occur with broad-spectrum antibiotics and a severe form of superinfection, antibiotic-associated colitis, has occurred with almost all antibiotics. Allergic reactions of all degrees of severity can occur with most antibiotics. The penicillins, followed by the cephalosporins and tetracyclines, are most frequently implicated in these reactions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Use of antibiotics in dental practice. 658 79

To assess the cost-effectiveness of prevention of infective endocarditis (IE) and to calculate cost-effectiveness of currently recommended regimens in patients with mitral valve prolapse (MVP), data on risk of death, complications, and health-care use, and cumulative incremental health-care costs due to the occurrence of IE were combined with data on the prevalence and manifestations of MVP, estimated years of life lost, and efficacy of antibiotic prophylaxis. Effectiveness and costs of standard endocarditis prophylaxis regimens were calculated per IE case prevented and years of life saved. Under the most likely scenario, oral amoxicillin prophylaxis for all MVP patients would prevent 32 cases of IE per million dental procedures at approximate costs of $119,000 per prevented case and $21,000 per year of life saved. Limiting prophylaxis to patients with mitral murmurs would prevent 80 cases of IE per million procedures at costs of about $19,000 per prevented case and $3,000 per year of life saved. Erythromycin prophylaxis was slightly less expensive than amoxicillin per benefit because of lower cost and lack of drug anaphylaxis, whereas intravenous ampicillin was 7 to 30 times more costly. Sensitivity analyses suggested that erythromycin prophylaxis might be cost-saving under some scenarios, whereas intravenous ampicillin use might cause net loss of life. Thus, prevention with oral antibiotics of the cumulative morbidity and incremental health care costs due to IE in MVP patients is reasonably cost-effective for MVP patients with mitral murmurs.
...
PMID:Cost-effectiveness of infective endocarditis prophylaxis for mitral valve prolapse with or without a mitral regurgitant murmur. 797 41

Elderly dental patients are at risk of developing infective endocarditis. Increased longevity is associated with an increased prevalence of cardiac valvular disease and impairment of the immune system. Aortic stenosis commonly occurs in persons between 60 and 75 years of age. Degenerative calcification of the mitral valve ring leading to valve incompetency often develops in those over age 70 years. Men over the age of 60 years with mitral valve prolapse and systolic hypertension are at risk of infective endocarditis because the excessive haemodynamic load placed upon the abnormal valve causes extensive stretching of cusps and loss of valve surface endothelium. Dental procedures, that result in mucosal or gingival bleeding (most notably dental extractions, periodontal probing, scaling and surgery, endodontics and restorative procedures which extend below the gingival line), frequently produce a bacteraemia. Anaerobic strains of bacteria are isolated twice as frequently as aerobic strains. Antibiotic prophylaxis decreases the level of bacteraemia, prevents adherence of bacteria to the damaged valvular epithelium and suppresses the growth of those microbes that manage to adhere to the valve. The standard prophylactic regimen consists of amoxicillin 3g 1 hour before the dental procedure, then 1.5g 6 hours after the initial dose. Erythromycin is a good alternative for penicillin-allergic patients. Topical chlorhexidine 5 minutes before initiating dental therapy reduces the bacterial inoculum and the likelihood of endocarditis.
...
PMID:Pathogenesis and prevention of native valve infective endocarditis in elderly dental patients. 801 55

The microflora associated with odontogenic infections are typically mixed and of indigenous origin. Streptococcus, peptostreptococcus, peptococcus, fusobacterium, bacteroides, and actinomyces species are the principle microflora isolated from these infections. Penicillin V (phenoxymethyl penicillin) remains the antimicrobial of choice for the initial empirical treatment of odontogenic infections. This agent is safe, highly effective and inexpensive. Amoxicillin has little indication for the routine treatment of odontogenic infections. However, it is the agent of choice for endocarditis prophylaxis, as it produces higher serum levels than penicillin V. Erythromycin may be used for mild, acute odontogenic infections in penicillin-allergic patients. The high incidence of gastrointestinal disturbances and superinfection commonly associated with the ingestion of tetracycline limits its role in general dental practice. Tetracycline may be considered as an alternative therapy for penicillin-allergic patients over the age of 13 who cannot tolerate erythromycin. Clindamycin is very effective against all odontogenic pathogens, but its potential gastrointestinal toxicity relegates it to third- or even fourth-line therapy in general dentistry. Although metronidazole displays excellent activity against anaerobic gram-negative bacilli, it is only moderately effective against facultative and anaerobic gram-positive cocci, and should not be used alone in the treatment of acute odontogenic infections.
...
PMID:A review of commonly prescribed oral antibiotics in general dentistry. 845 30

Erythromycin and other macrolides have enjoyed a renaissance in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s secondary to the discovery of "new' pathogens such as Chlamydia, Legionella, Campylobacter and Mycoplasma spp. Erythromycin is an important therapeutic agent in the paediatric age group for several reasons: (a) it exhibits proven efficacy for a wide range of infections (upper and lower respiratory tract infections, skin/skin structure infections, prophylaxis of endocarditis/acute rheumatic fever/ophthalmia neonatorum and pre-colonic surgery, campylobacteriosis, chlamydial and ureaplasmal infections, diphtheria, whooping cough, streptococcal pharyngitis) and gastrointestinal (GI) dysmotility states; (b) intravenous formulations are widely available; and (c) it is available in a number of formulations as a generic product, which is likely to result in significant cost savings. Nevertheless, erythromycin and similar earlier macrolides are characterised by a number of drawbacks including a narrow spectrum of antimicrobial activity, unfavourable pharmacokinetic properties and poor GI tolerability. Newer macrolides such as clarithromycin and azithromycin are useful in serving the needs of paediatric patients who are erythromycin-intolerant or who have infections caused by organisms that are intrinsically erythromycin-resistant, or for which a high percentage of strains are resistant (e.g. Haemophilus influenzae, Helicobacter pylori, Mycobacterium avium complex). In addition, these newer macrolides may be considered as alternatives to oral amoxicillin-clavulanic acid, second or third generation cephalosporins, or erythromycin plus sulphonamide in this patient population. Selection between specific macrolides and between macrolides and other antibiotics in the paediatric population is likely to depend, at least for the immediate future, on separate comparisons of product availability, cost, effectiveness and tolerability profiles.
...
PMID:Macrolide antibiotics in paediatric infectious diseases. 870 92

Erythromycin and clindamycin are currently recommended for antibiotic prophylaxis of infective endocarditis in predisposed patients allergic to penicillin undergoing oral invasive procedures. Thirty-eight healthy patients were randomized to receive either erythromycin (1 g) or clindamycin (0.6 g) orally 1.5 h prior to dental extraction. Blood samples for microbiological investigation were collected before, during and 10 min after surgery and were processed by lysis filtration under anaerobic conditions. The incidence of bacteraemia with viridans streptococci was 79% in the erythromycin group and 74% in the clindamycin group. No statistically significant difference was noted in incidence or magnitude of bacteraemia with viridans streptococci or anaerobic bacteria between the two groups, at any sampling time. Ninety-six aerobic and 133 anaerobic strains recovered from the blood samples were tested for their susceptibility to erythromycin and clindamycin as well as to penicillin V and ampicillin. The antimicrobials were found to be highly active against the majority of bacteria except for some enterococci, staphylococci and veillonella. Protection from endocarditis by prophylaxis with erythromycin or clindamycin must be due to elimination of bacteria at a later stage in the development of the disease, rather than by elimination of bacteria from blood during the short period of postoperative bacteraemia.
...
PMID:Elimination of bacteraemia after dental extraction: comparison of erythromycin and clindamycin for prophylaxis of infective endocarditis. 872 44

Erythromycin, the prototypical macrolide, has been widely used since the 1950s in the management of pediatric infections. Erythromycin is the drug of choice for infants and children with Legionnaire's disease, pertussis, diphtheria, lower respiratory tract infections caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniae and Chlamydia trachomatis and enteritis caused by Campylobacter jejuni. It is also indicated for treatment of syphilis; for streptococcal, staphylococcal and pneumococcal infections; genital infections caused by Ureaplasma urealyticum; and for the prevention of rheumatic fever and endocarditis in patients who are allergic to beta-lactam antibiotics. The new macrolides azithromycin and clarithromycin are also active against Borrelia burgdorferi, Helicobacter pylori, Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare complex, Cryptosporidium spp. and Toxoplasma gondii. Erythromycin is associated with a low risk of serious side effects, although gastric distress occurs in a significant proportion of patients. Drug interactions with theophylline, carbamazepine, warfarin, cyclosporine, terfenadine and digoxin limit erythromycin use. The newer macrolides azithromycin and clarithromycin are more stable, better absorbed and better tolerated than erythromycin. Azithromycin is more active than erythromycin against Haemophilus influenzae. Excellent tissue and intracellular penetration may contribute to their clinical efficacy. In children both azithromycin and clarithromycin are indicated for acute otitis media caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae, H. influenzae and Moraxella catarrhalis and for pharyngitis/tonsillitis caused by Streptococcus pyogenes. (As of December, 1996, azithromycin for oral suspension was approved for community-acquired pneumonia in children caused by C. pneumoniae, H. influenzae, M. pneumoniae and S. pneumoniae.) Claritromycin is also indicated for acute maxillary sinusitis, uncomplicated skin and skin structure infections, pneumonia and disseminated mycobacterial infections. Azithromycin and clarithromycin are associated with a lower incidence of gastrointestinal side effects, a low rate of drug discontinuation caused by side effects and a low potential for interaction with other drugs.
...
PMID:History of macrolide use in pediatrics. 910 54


1 2 Next >>