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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (
hepatitis
)
30,205
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Stevens-Johnson syndrome is rarely associated with
hepatitis
and neither entity is commonly seen following the use of
ampicillin
or cephalexin. An infant is described in whom both entities appeared simultaneously following therapy with these drugs.
...
PMID:Stevens-Johnson syndrome with hepatitis following therapy with ampicillin and cephalexin. 105 88
In the course of a typhoid epidemic during the autumn of 1974 in the Heidelberg region 74 persons were treated in hospital. Chloramphenicol was give to 45,
ampicillin
to 19. The former, in daily doses of 2.0 g, gave worse results if given for only two instead of three weeks. In comparison,
ampicillin
was less effective. A second course of treatment became necessary in 13 patients, with trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole (Bactrim) being succesful in all, although the follow-up period is still too short for definitive results. Three complications occurred: one case of massive bleeding from the gut requiring operation and followed some weeks later by a HBS-antigen-negative
hepatitis
; one case of typhoma (several weeks after the end of antibiotic treatment), requiring operative removal; a case of febrile abortion in the second month of pregnancy.
...
PMID:[Clinical course of typhoid in the Heidelberg region (author's transl)]. 108 Jul 5
Listeria monocytogenes is a Gram-positive bacillus that is pathogenic in both the normal and compromised host. We describe Listeria peritonitis and cerebritis in a patient with cirrhosis due to non-A, non-B
hepatitis
, and review the 11 other cases of Listeria peritonitis reported in the English-language literature. Listeria is a rare cause of peritonitis in debilitated, older patients, with two-thirds of the cases occurring in patients with chronic liver disease. Listeria peritonitis may also occur in patients undergoing peritoneal dialysis, or in those with malignancy. Peritonitis due to Listeria is clinically similar to spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, and is associated with fever, variable abdominal pain, and neutrocytic ascites; bacteremia commonly accompanies Listeria peritonitis. This syndrome can be successfully treated with antimicrobial drugs, although the third-generation cephalosporins commonly used in the therapy of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis are not recommended. Ampicillin may be the drug of choice, with combination therapy with an aminoglycoside reserved for cases that do not respond to
ampicillin
alone.
...
PMID:Listeria monocytogenes peritonitis: case report and literature review. 144 54
Leptospirosis is still endemic in the Po valley. It has an extremely protean clinical picture. In a series of 79 cases diagnosed at Pavia in the period 1970-79 hepatonephritic forms were the most common (29.1%), followed by febrile or pseudo-influenza forms (25.3%),
hepatitis
(20.2%), nephritis (17.8%), and meningitis (7.6%). Febrile hepatonephritis was always accompanied by the most severe pictures. Timely antibiotic management with penicillin or
ampicillin
, and above all the early use of peritoneal dialysis (carried in 10 subjects) enable a final cure to be obtained even in these cases. The only death in that series did not appear to be ascribable to the disease itself.
...
PMID:[Current clinical aspects of leptospirosis]. 667 98
All the cases of enteric fever admitted between 1988-1992 were studied. There was a gradual rise in the number of admitted cases. Central nervous system (CNS) complications like encephalopathy (14.9%), meningitis (8.8%), seizures (8.5%) and cerebellitis (3.4%) were noted more during 1991 and 1992. Other complications like myocarditis (4.6%),
hepatitis
(9.5%) and gastrointestinal bleeding were noted in increasing numbers during 1991-1992. Multidrug resistant (MDRT) cases were 46.3% in 1991 and 33.5% in 1992. There was a significant difference in the time taken for defervescence (a gradual rise) between the years but between the individual drugs there was no such significant difference. Deaths were noted only in 1991 and 1992 in cases of MDRT with complications. There has been an increase in resistance of S. typhi to commonly used drugs like
ampicillin
, chloramphenicol and cotrimoxazole. S. typhi resistant to ciprofloxacin was cultured in 2 cases each from 1990-1992. Further, the time taken for defervescence with ciprofloxacin also showed a gradual rise from 3.5 days in 1990 to 6.2 days in 1992. Nevertheless, ciprofloxacin is still the drug of choice for treatment of complicated cases of MDRT.
...
PMID:Enteric fever: a changing perspective. 789 Mar 44
The authors describe a clinical case of Multiple Organ Failure (MOF). Such a pathology was reported, at admission in ICU, in a young woman aged 26 who was in the 30th week of amenorrhoea, formerly hospitalized in Obstetrics, where she had had a Caesarean section because of the met of eclamptic crisis, after a pregnancy substantially normal. At the moment of her admission to the ICU the examination highlighted the sense organ obnubilated, the breath dyspnoic, a systolic and diastolic hypotension and a tachycardia of medium seriousness. From laboratory examinations it was possible to maintain that there was a serious anemia with white cells raised, a coagulative imbalance and above all a serious alteration of hepatic and pancreatic function. The creatininemia had increased a bit, a clear contraction of diuresis was present and a considerable metabolic acidosis had become intelled. Therefore the patient was affected by multiple organ failure. In successive days it was possible to execute an EEG that proved substantially normal, then a Computer Tomography to abdomen showed the presence of vast areas of hepatic necrosis, ascitic hemorrhagic fluid and a volume increased pancreas.
Hepatitis
markers proved negative, while a positive response was achieved for a typhoid infection (this result was reconfirmed many times later.) Modifying the antibiotic therapy (substituting full dose
ampicillin
to the cephalosporin) the clinical case was solved. Moreover, also thanks to a very good answer to antibiotic therapy, it was possible to confirm the diagnosis of typhoid fever, not gestosis.
...
PMID:[Multiple organ failure in pre-term pregnancy: gestosis and/or typhoid fever?]. 798 17
Two patients who developed cholestatic liver disease after exposure to antibiotics are described. One patient who received clindamycin had liver biopsy findings of marked cholestasis, portal inflammation, bile duct injury and bile duct paucity (ductopenia). A second biopsy after clinical improvement showed resolution of cholestasis but persistence of duct paucity. Three years later, treatment with
ampicillin
caused another episode of cholestatic
hepatitis
with cholestasis and duct paucity on rebiopsy. The second patient, who developed cholestasis after receiving trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, had marked duct paucity in the liver biopsy. This is the first description, to our knowledge, of ductopenia apparently caused by clindamycin. Cross-reactivity between clindamycin and
ampicillin
is also demonstrated in one patient. This report documents that duct paucity may occur within 10 days of onset of jaundice and appears to be confined to ducts less than 0.03 mm in diameter.
...
PMID:Cholestatic liver disease with ductopenia (vanishing bile duct syndrome) after administration of clindamycin and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. 805 40
Listeria is an uncommon cause of
hepatitis
in adults. We report the case of a liver transplant recipient who presented with a clinical picture of acute hepatitis, 8 months after grafting. Blood cultures yielded Listeria monocytogenes. The patient made a full clinical recovery after adequate antimicrobial therapy (
ampicillin
and gentamicin intravenously for 4 weeks).
Hepatitis
was attributed to the Listeria infection. We believe this is the first reported case of Listeria
hepatitis
in an organ transplant recipient.
...
PMID:Listeria monocytogenes hepatitis in a liver transplant recipient: a case report and review of the literature. 822 21
Multidrug-resistant Salmonella typhi has spread to many parts of India, causing severe therapeutic problems. Of the 305 clinically suspected cases of enteric fever seen at Kasturba Hospital in Manipal, Karnataka between January 1990 and June 1991, Salmonella bacteremia was detected in 134 patients; 102 of these were caused by S. typhi. Eighty (78.4%) of the isolates from S. typhi-infected patients were resistant to conventional antibiotics used in the treatment of typhoid fever (i.e.,
ampicillin
, chloramphenicol, and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole). No in vitro resistance was observed to ciprofloxacin, norfloxacin, and gentamicin. Major complications were seen in four patients infected by multiresistant S. typhi; three responded well to ciprofloxacin. The fourth patient died of hemorrhage and acute renal failure, even after receiving ciprofloxacin. In addition, less severe complications such as
hepatitis
and jaundice were observed in 12 other patients. Seventy-six of the multiresistant S. typhi belonged to phage type O biotype II and four were of untypeable Vi strains. The emergence of multidrug-resistant S. typhi has necessitated the use of fluoroquinolones in the therapy for enteric fever.
...
PMID:Emergence of multidrug-resistant Salmonella typhi in rural southern India. 842 78
One hundred and seventy-eight cases of typhoid patients were studied on clinical and bacteriological aspects. The main clinical findings were as follows: (1) Most of the cases had sustained fever (66.3%). (2) Gastroenterial symptoms developed as the disesase progressed. (3) Rose spots were found in 32.6% of them. (4) Liver and spleen were enlarged in 69.5% of the cases. (5) Blood eosinophil disappeared in most of the patients and leukopenia was noted in 94.3%. (6) There were toxic
hepatitis
(47.1%), toxic myocarditis (22.4%) and intestinal hemorrhage (19.7%) as complications. In the drug sensitivity test, the number of
ampicillin
-resistant and chloramphenicol-resistant strains of salmonella typhi was increased more than that seen 5 years ago (P < 0.05), however 100% of the strains were sensitive to amikacin, tobramycin, norflexacin, oflexacin and the third generation of the cephalosporin. For the time being, norflexacin and oflexacin were good and suitable drugs for the treatment of typhoid fever.
...
PMID:[Clinical and laboratory studies with typhoid fever 178 patients]. 986 65
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