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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (hyperphagia)
6,116 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Candida parapsilosis is rarely isolated from blood cultures. Our hospital surveillance detected an increased rate of isolation of C parapsilosis during a four month period. Fourteen postoperative patients receiving intravenous (IV) hyperalimentation and eight burn patients receiving IV albumin were involved. Hectic fever, the major clinical manifestation, was seen in 61% of cases. Therapy in the postoperative patients consisted merely of discontinuing IV catheters and hyperalimentation, while amphotericin B was needed in five of eight burn patients to control persistent fungemia. Epidemiologic analysis identified a source of the organism in the IV-additive preparation room where C parapsilosis was found contaminating a vacuum system. Organisms apparently refluxed into IV bottles when aliquots were removed to accommodate additives. Of 103 patients who received fluids prepared with the contaminated system, 21% became infected with C parapsilosis. Infection surveillance was instrumental in detection and control of the outbreak. Routine guideline should be established to insure the sterility of IV fluids containing additives.
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PMID:Nosocomial outbreak of Candida parapsilosis fungemia related to intravenous infusions. 41 74

Ten episodes of Torulopsis glabrata fungemia occurring in nine patients with terminal illnesses are described. Eight patients had underlying malignancies and one patient had a plastic anemia. Two episodes of fungemia were considered transient since they were clearly related to the administration of intravenous hyperalimentation (IVH). Most patients were adult women and had solid tumors of the genitourinary tract. Contributory factors were: antibiotic therapy (100%), immunosuppressive drugs (75%), abdominal surgery (63%), IVH (50%), neutropenia (38%), and diabetes mellitus (13%). The clinical course was indistinguishable from a severe bacterial infection. However, endotoxic shock was not observed. The infection was rapidly fatal in four patients. In the remaining five patients, the infection was altered favorably by the discontinuation of infected intravenous hyperalimentation catheters. However, tissue invasion by T. glabrata was found in two of these patients who died shortly thereafter from tumor progression. At autopsy, T. glabrata was identified in tissue sections of the lungs, kidneys, and mucosas of the gastrointestinal and genitourinary tracts. In all cases there was tissue necrosis with a minor inflammatory response consisting of mononuclear cells. To our knowledge, this is the single largest series of T. glabrata fungemia ever reported.
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PMID:Fungemia due to Torulopsis glabrata in the compromised host. 82 17

A prospective study of patients hospitalized in a large Veterans Administration Hospital between November 1963 and November 1973 revealed 123 patients with deep mycotic infections. The incidence of these infections almost doubled during the last 5 years. Candida (55 patients) and Aspergillus (26 patients) were the major causative agents. Nine other fungal caused infection in the remaining patients. Candidemia was rare prior to the introduction of commerical percutaneously-inserted venous catheters in 1965. The incidence increased further following the introduction of parenteral hyperalimentation in 1969, and Torulopsis fungemia (5 patients) appeared for the first time. Invasive pneumonia caused by spore-forming Aspergillus decreased when patients were moved from an old, naturally-ventilated hospital to a new, mechanically-ventilated one. The air in both hospitals was sampled on one occasion for the presence of fungal spores, and spores of Aspergillus fumigatus were detected only in the old hospital. Our experience suggests that hospital-acquired Aspergillus infection of the lung might be eliminated if all incoming hospital air is filtered, properly vented, and not recirculated. Efforts to decrease hospital-acquired fungal infections include vigorous infection control procedures for intravenous therapy, judicious use of any therapy that predisposes to infection, and further evaluation of improved mechanical control of hospital ventilation.
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PMID:Deep mycotic infection in the hospitalized adult: a study of 123 patients. 118 93

Early reports associated Candida parapsilosis with endocarditis in intravenous narcotic addicts. More recently, this species has emerged as an important nosocomial pathogen, with clinical manifestations including fungemia, endocarditis, endophthalmitis, septic arthritis, and peritonitis, all of which usually occur in association with invasive procedures or prosthetic devices. Outbreaks of C. parapsilosis infections have been caused by contamination of hyperalimentation solutions, intravascular pressure monitoring devices, and ophthalmic irrigating solution. Experimental studies have generally shown that C. parapsilosis is less virulent than Candida albicans or Candida tropicalis. However, characteristics of C. parapsilosis that may relate to its increasing occurrence in nosocomial settings include frequent colonization of the skin, particularly the subungual space, and an ability to proliferate in glucose-containing solutions, with a resultant increase in adherence to synthetic materials. Recently developed molecular techniques may facilitate the continued exploration of the epidemiology and pathogenesis of C. parapsilosis infections.
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PMID:Candida parapsilosis: epidemiology, pathogenicity, clinical manifestations, and antimicrobial susceptibility. 801 46

Eighty-four patients with fungemia were analyzed. Fungi had been isolated by culture of blood samples, including blood from the catheter for intravenous hyperalimentation, between 1986-1990. Candida albicans (39.3%), Candida parapsilosis (20.2%), Candida tropicalis (11.9%), Candida glabrata (10.7%), Candida guilliermondii (4.8%) and Trichosporon beigelii (4.8%) were the most frequently isolated fungal pathogens. Four patients' blood yielded two different fungal species. Fifty-nine cases were male, and 25 cases were female. Forty-six of the 84 patients died (54.8%), but there were no differences in the overall mortality rate as a function of the fungal species or sex. All patients had underlying diseases: solid cancer, 37 cases; cardiovascular diseases, 9 cases; gastrointestinal diseases excluding gastrointestinal cancer, 8 cases; central nervous system diseases, 7 cases; premature infants and congenital abnormality, 7 cases; leukemia, 6 cases and miscellaneous, 10 cases. Twenty-four of the 46 dead cases were autopsied, and eight cases showed systemic fungal lesions. However, in one case of pulmonary cryptococcosis and one case of pulmonary penicilliosis, there was no correlation between the isolation of C. glabrata by blood culture and the pathological findings. A fungus-positive blood culture was surmised to be a result of contamination of the sample in 33 cases, and the mortality rate for those cases was 72.2% (24 cases). For 6 of the corpses, fungal lesions observed at autopsy were compatible with the types of lesions found by the fungi which had been isolated before death. Removal of the catheter reduced the mortality rate to 41.7%. Fungal endophthalmitis was diagnosed in six cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Analysis of 84 cases with fungemia]. 140 94

To determine the frequency of endogenous Candida endophthalmitis in patients with candidemia, we prospectively evaluated 32 inpatients with fungemia by weekly indirect ophthalmoscopic examinations. Chorioretinitis compatible with Candida infection was found in 9 (28%) patients. Patient age, sex, underlying diseases, or hospital-acquired factors, such as presence of central venous or Foley catheters, bacteremia, use of multiple antibiotics, hyperalimentation, or surgery, did not distinguish between groups. Groups were also similar in number of sites colonized with yeast and species of Candida recovered. Patients with endophthalmitis tended to have more blood cultures positive for Candida (mean, 4.3) than the patients without endophthalmitis (mean, 2.8), but this trend did not reach statistical significance. Based on these results, we recommend periodic ophthalmoscopic examinations in all patients with documented candidemia.
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PMID:Prospective study of Candida endophthalmitis in hospitalized patients with candidemia. 280 88

Until recently, Malassezia furfur was thought to be a pathogen only in tinea versicolor. More recently, this lipophilic yeast has been recovered from sick neonates with catheter-related infections. Malassezia fungemia was studied in seven patients, and the salient features of this infection in patients described in the literature were reviewed. Major risk factors include prolonged hospitalization, the presence of central venous catheters, and the use of intravenous fat emulsions. It is difficult to identify specific manifestations of fungemia in these complex cases occurring in patients with severe underlying disease; however, neonates often present with the signs and symptoms of sepsis and thrombocytopenia, whereas fever may be the only manifestation in adults. Some patients are asymptomatic. When symptoms are present, they resolve upon removal of the colonized catheter. The role of the lipophilic nature of Malassezia in the pathogenesis of infection is apparent from the ability of intravenous fat emulsions to support the growth of the fungus in vitro. A special solid medium that can be used to determine the true prevalence of malassezia fungemia has been devised. M. furfur must be considered in the differential diagnosis of opportunistic infections in patients receiving central hyperalimentation and should be sought by the culture of blood on appropriate medium.
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PMID:Malassezia fungemia in neonates and adults: complication of hyperalimentation. 312 78

Autopsy findings of 133 patients who died following fungemia or with invasive fungal infection were reviewed. Common clinical factors included antibiotic therapy, chemotherapy, corticosteroid administration, hyperalimentation, malignancy, and bone marrow transplantation. Fungal infection was seldom diagnosed antemortem and fungemia was detected in only 24 patients (18%). Ocular involvement occurred in 14 patients (Candida 11, Aspergillus 2, and Cryptococcus 1). The eye was the fifth most commonly involved organ at autopsy among patients with candida infection. Ocular involvement occurred with a significantly greater frequency in patients with Candida tropicalis than with Candida albicans infections (P less than 0.05). Although only about 10% of patients with fungal infections had ocular involvement, all those with ocular lesions had widely disseminated disease. Realizing the potential toxicity of antifungal therapy, we recommend that screening ophthalmologic examinations be performed on patients with fungemia or patients at high risk for development of fungal infection. The presence of ocular lesions consistent with fungal disease, in the appropriate setting, is a strong indication for investigation of possible systemic fungal infection and therapy once a definitive diagnosis is established.
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PMID:Ocular involvement in patients with fungal infections. 387 82

Thirty-eight patients with fungemia were examined prospectively for development of endophthalmitis. Endophthalmitis was present in 10 of 27 (37%) patients with Candida albicans fungemia. Only one patients with nonalbicans fungemia developed endophthalmitis. Of the preselected factors studied, only hemodialysis and parenteral hyperalimentation correlated with an increased incidence of endophthalmitis. Antibody titers by latex agglutination were of little predictive value for endophthalmitis. Antigen titers by latex agglutination were performed in four cases with endophthalmitis. Antigenemia was demonstrated in three of the four patients, all of whom had negative antibody serologies. Although inconclusive, the preliminary data indicate the test may prove to be of clinical value. Periodic ophthalmoscopic examinations should be considered mandatory in the evaluation of patients with fungemia.
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PMID:Endogenous endophthalmitis among patients with candidemia. 698 88

Positive blood cultures reported between 1986 and 1993 at the Tokyo Metropolitan Komagome Hospital were evaluated and all patients with an intravenous hyperalimentation catheter who developed candidemia, a total of 94 patients, were analyzed further, while patients with neutropenia were excluded. The primary diagnosis was malignancy in 87.2% of the cases, and Candida albicans and C. parapsilosis were the main organisms detected. A total of 17 patients died from candidemia. The patients who were positive for C. parapsilosis, however, all survived in spite of the fact that their main treatment was only removal of the catheter (20/32 cases), while eight of 25 patients who developed fungemia due to C. albicans died from the fungemia (p = 0.001). There were no significant differences in their risk factors. Because of the better outcome for the patients who developed candidemia due to C. parapsilosis, we might be able to consider less aggressive treatment for such patients.
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PMID:Candidemia in non-neutropenic patients with an intravenous hyperalimentation catheter: good prognosis of Candida parapsilosis infection. 759 97


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