Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0017168 (gastroesophageal reflux disease)
11,783 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Acinetobacter calcoaceticus var. anitratus (ACA) was isolated from two newborn infants and var. Iwoffi of the same species from a third patient within a month in the neonatal unit of a general hospital at Metropolitan Santiago, Chile. The first isolate was obtained from a neonate with infection of the skin surrounding a colostomy operation after surgery for tracheo esophageal fistulae, in march 1989. The second case's skin became colonized after he was admitted for surgical repair of severe gastroesophageal reflux into the same ward room and nursed in proximity to the first case, making necessary the use of antibiotic prophylaxis with sulbactam-ampicillin prior to surgery. The third case, a very immature female baby, was born at the same month; she had early septicaemia due to Acinetobacter calcoaceticus var. Iwoffi sensitive to gentamicin and after appropriate treatment her clinical recovery was uneventful. In the microbiological study of the neonatal unit this last microorganism was isolated from thermometers of the nursery and on the hands of one member of the nursing staff, while ACA had been reported at the preceding month from operating rooms and anesthesia equipment. Intensive surveillance of ward's environment, equipment and personnel, barrier precautions, and improved staff handwashing were then instituted and extension of an outbreak was thus avoided.
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PMID:[Acinetobacter in a metropolitan neonatal unit: clinical and microbiological aspects]. 184 63

A 13-yr-old boy was scheduled for emergency appendicectomy because of abdominal pain. His preoperative medical history was complicated by a recent hospital admission for management of asthma. He had presented to hospital seven days earlier because of dyspnoea, tachypnoea and oxygen desaturation to 77% on room air. Following admission, he required intensive nonventilatory management of his asthma, including intravenous salbutamol, methylprednisolone, and aminophylline, as well as use of an ipratroprium bromide inhaler and 100% oxygen by mask. He was discharged to the ward, and continued on prednisone (delta-cortisone), beclomethasone inhaler, ipratroprium inhaler, and salbutamol inhaler. During his ICU stay, he complained of nonspecific abdominal pain, interpreted as gastro-oesophageal reflux. After four days, he was discharged to the ward. On his sixth hospital day, he began to experience right-sided lower abdominal pain and right shoulder pain. A surgeon was consulted, and the patient was found to have a very tender right lower quadrant with guarding and rebound pain. He was therefore scheduled for appendicectomy; antibiotic therapy with ampicillin, gentamicin, and metronidazole was initiated.
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PMID:Anaesthetic management of an asthmatic child for appendicectomy. 806 95

The in vivo bioavailability and in vitro drug-release studies of ampicillin trihydrate in different oily and aqueous suspensions have been investigated. In addition, partition, solubility, and rheological measurements have also been carried out. The in vivo experimental design was based on a 6 x 6 latin square using the rabbit as the test animal. The bioavailability of ampicillin was determined using the plasma levels, which were measured microbiologically. Results of the study showed that oily and sucrose-containing aqueous formulations enhanced the extent of ampicillin absorption, although not statistically significantly, but was close to the borderline of significance. Ampicillin appears to be absorbed at essentially the same rate from both aqueous and oily formulations. The latter showed plasma-level time curves with biphasic absorption and are likely to produce prolonged plasma concentrations of ampicillin because of the effects of enterohepatic recycling. Viscosity appears to play an insignificant role in the results obtained since the bioavailability parameters correlate poorly with the viscosity except Cmax. It is suggested that enhancement in the bioavailability of ampicillin is due to the decrease in the gut transit rate brought about by the oil which predominates and masks the other effects of viscosity and osmotic effects of sucrose. The existence of a correlation between the in vitro drug-release rate (t50%) and viscosity and the lack of a correlation between in vivo and in vitro parameters support the above suggestion and indicate that traditional dissolution rate tests, such as flask-stirrer method, are unsatisfactory as bioavailability indicators when applied to dosage forms that caused marked changes in physiological factors like GER and biliary excretion.
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PMID:Effects of oils and pharmaceutical excipients on the bioavailability of ampicillin orally administered, different oily and aqueous suspensions in rabbit. 1260 92

A 85-year-old female was admitted to our hospital because of a fever and unconsciousness. Three days prior to admission, she had been diagnosed to have influenza A, and oseltamivir was therefore prescribed. The symptoms due to the influenza infection, including the fever, thereafter rapidly resolved. She regularly took 10 mg zopiclone for insomnia before sleeping. On the day of admission, she was drowsy with fever. Chest radiography showed bilateral massive infiltration of the lungs. Chest CT images revealed multilobar and nodular infiltration on both lungs. She underwent the partial gastrectomy 10 years ago due to the gastrointestinal bleeding. After that, gastro-esophageal reflux syndrome was occurred in the patient. A bronchoscope was easily inserted into the trachea without anesthesia. Aspirated saliva was found in trachea. Based on her post-gastrectomy state, post-gastrectomy aspiration pneumonia was diagnosed. Sulbactam/ampicillin (SBT/ABPC) (6 g) was administered daily, which led to reduced inflammatory responses and lung infiltration. Although influenza itself is sometimes critical for the elderly, careful attention should be paid to subsequent bacterial infections in patients who are at risk for developing aspiration pneumonia.
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PMID:[An elderly case of post-gastrectomy aspiration pneumonia following an influenza virus A infection]. 2462 40

Pneumonia in the elderly results in the highest mortality among cases of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP). The pathophysiology of pneumonia in the elderly is primarily due to aspiration pneumonia (ASP). ASP comprises two pathological conditions: airspace infiltration with bacterial pathogens and dysphagia-associated miss-swallowing. The first-line therapy for the treatment of bacterial pneumonia in the elderly is a narrow spectrum of antibiotics, including sulbactam/ampicillin, which are effective against major lower respiratory infection pathogens and anaerobes. The bacterial pathogens of ASP cases of pneumonia in the elderly are similar to those associated with adult CAP. In addition to an appropriate course of antibiotics, pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic approaches for dysphagia and upper airway management are necessary for the treatment and prevention of pneumonia. Swallowing rehabilitation, oral health care, pneumococcal vaccination, gastroesophageal reflux management, and a head-up position during the night are necessary for the treatment and prevention of repeated episodes of pneumonia in elderly patients. In addition, tuberculosis should always be considered for the differential diagnosis of pneumonia in this patient population.
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PMID:Update on the pathogenesis and management of pneumonia in the elderly-roles of aspiration pneumonia. 2634 6