Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0023241 (
Legionella
)
6,990
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
9 consecutive cases of
Legionnaires' disease
are presented, all of which involved either a pathological urinary sediment or acute
renal insufficiency
. Diabetic glomerular sclerosis and terminal septic shock in one patient accounted per se for the urinary findings and terminal oliguric renal failure. In the remaining 8 patients the renal abnormalities are interpreted as manifestations of
Legionnaires' disease
: these were acute
renal insufficiency
in 6, requiring dialysis treatment in 4, proteinuria in 7, hematuria in 5, leukocyturia in 5 and cylindruria in 3 patients. One patient died of pneumonia and one patient, without
Legionella
-related renal involvement, of septic shock. Renal histology of 5 patients showed acute interstitial nephritis in one and diffuse sclerosing interstitial nephritis in a second patient, whose biopsy was obtained after 3 months' hemodialysis treatment. In 3 patients renal biopsy findings were explained by preexisting renal pathology, i.e. diabetic nephropathy, chronic transplant rejection and shock kidney respectively. Renal failure requiring hemodialysis and urinary abnormalities were largely reversible.
...
PMID:[Renal involvement in Legionnaires' disease]. 381 99
Legionnaires' disease
is recognized as a multisystemic illness. Afflicted patients may have pulmonary, gastrointestinal tract, and central nervous system complications. However, dermal involvement is not well documented and
renal insufficiency
is uncommon and usually of mild severity. We report two consecutive cases of proven Legionella infection that were unusual in that a macular rash and profound renal failure requiring hemodialysis were noted. Skin biopsy specimens of the rash and autopsy findings suggest that these atypical features may have been mediated by the Legionella infection. Although it is not entirely clear from these two cases, we suggest that the skin and renal involvement may have been mediated by either a "toxin" elaborated by the organism, an immunologic response of the host to the organism, or some other unidentified mechanism.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease associated with rash and renal failure. 398 34
Ninety patients with serious infections, including 61 with septicaemia, pneumonia, peritonitis or meningitis, were treated with ceftazidime. Of these patients, 85.6% were clinically cured (73.3%) or improved (12.2%) by the antibiotic. In this study, 57.7% had infections due to Escherichia coli (24.7%), Klebsiella sp. (14.5%) and Pseudomonas sp. (18.5%). Two children with cystic fibrosis and Pseudomonas pneumonia and an adult with
Legionella pneumonia
responded well to ceftazidime treatment. Seventy patients had fever before treatment and most of them became apyrexial in less than 2 to 3 days. Ceftazidime was given either intramuscularly (42 patients) or intravenously (48 patients), in a dose of 1 g tds in 71 patients or 2 g tds in severe infections in 11 patients, or reduced to suit the renal function (7 patients) or in paediatric doses (2 children). Blood ceftazidime levels were measured in eight patients with normal renal function. The average level one hour post dosing was 45.2 mg/l and the average trough level was 8.1 mg/l. Six patients were suffering from variable degrees of
renal insufficiency
(serum creatinine 149 to 668 mmol/l). Their average blood level 1 h post-dosing was 68.8 mg/l. In a patient with meningitis, the CSF level was 2.4 mg/l 2 h after a 1 g dose. These levels are several times the ceftazidime MIC values for most clinical bacterial isolates. Ceftazidime is a valuable and safe alternative to aminoglycoside therapy.
...
PMID:Ceftazidime: a new approach in the treatment of moderate and severe infections. 635 15
The tetracyclines are active in vitro against many urinary tract pathogens such as Chlamydia, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Brucella, rickettsiae, and Nocardia. Chloramphenicol is used primarily for anaerobic infections, Haemophilus influenzae meningitis, and infections due to Salmonella typhi. Erythromycin is active in vitro against M. pneumoniae,
Legionella
spp., Streptococcus pneumoniae, and group A beta-hemolytic streptococci; it may also be used as prophylactic therapy for subacute bacterial endocarditis and for recurrence of acute rheumatic fever in patients who are allergic to penicillin. Clindamycin should be used primarily for the treatment of anaerobic infections. The tetracyclines may cause gastrointestinal upset; phototoxic dermatitis; hepatitis, especially in pregnant women; discoloration of the teeth and bone dysplasia in the human fetus and in children; and superinfections, especially oral and anogenital candidiasis. The tetracyclines should be used with caution in patients with
renal insufficiency
. The most important toxic effect of chloramphenicol is bone marrow suppression, which is dose related or idiosyncratic. The incidence of undesirable side effects associated with the use of erythromycin is low; gastrointestinal irritation is the most common, and cholestatic hepatitis may occur with the use of erythromycin estolate. Pseudomembranous colitis is the most important toxic effect associated with the use of clindamycin.
...
PMID:Tetracyclines, chloramphenicol, erythromycin, and clindamycin. 682 63
The chemistry, mode of action, antimicrobial activity, pharmacokinetics, and therapeutic efficacy of doxycycline are reviewed. Doxycycline displays excellent activity against gram-positive and gram-negative aerobic and anaerobic pathogens. The oral absorption of doxycycline is rapid and virtually complete and is not significantly decreased by food. Moreover, serum concentrations of doxycycline following oral and intravenous (i.v.) administration are comparable. Because of the prolonged half-life of doxycycline, once daily administration is possible. Tissue penetration of doxycycline is excellent. Levels within the therapeutic range have been found in most organs and tissues, including kidney, lung, gallbladder, prostate, intestinal tract, myocardium, sinus secretions, tonsil, aqueous humor, and female reproductive tissue. Doxycycline does not accumulate in patients with
renal insufficiency
and is not removed from the blood to any great extent during hemodialysis. Extensive clinical investigation has shown doxycycline to be highly effective in infections of the respiratory tract, including atypical pneumonias; skin and soft tissue; genitourinary infection including gonorrhea, syphilis, nonspecific urethritis, and prostatitis; intraabdominal infection due to trauma, sepsis, or surgery; and cholera. Evidence also suggests that doxycycline will prove effective in the treatment of
Legionnaires' disease
. In addition, placebo-controlled clinical trials suggest doxycycline is effective in the prevention of traveler's diarrhea.
...
PMID:Doxycycline. 704 45
In a prospective study (from April, 1980 to April, 1981) of 110 patients with moderately severe to severe pneumonia 11 were found to have 12 manifestations of
Legionnaires' disease
. Diagnosis was proven by indirect immunofluorescence tests, either a quadruple titre rise to 1 : 128 or a single titre of at least 1 : 256. The clinical picture in all 11 patients was the typical one of severe pneumonia, usually involving the lower lobes, high fever between 39 and 40.4 degrees C, as well as WBC counts between 6.8 and 28.9 X 10(9)/l. In nine cases artificial ventilation was required, in four there was acute renal failure requiring dialysis, in four other definite
renal insufficiency
. All patients had underlying disease, in some severe, such as chronic obstructive lung disease, diabetes mellitus, heart failure, liver cirrhosis, renal transplantation or extensive operations. Eight patients died, four of them of Legionnaires; disease. The relatively high infection rate (10%) indicates that in patients with risk factors, as well as those with a pneumonia unresponsive to the standard treatment within five to seven days,
Legionnaires' disease
should be considered in the differential diagnosis.
...
PMID:[Legionnaires' disease: prospective study of its incidence, clinical features and prognosis. (author's transl)]. 706 Apr 96
A patient undergoing examination for moderately severe
renal insufficiency
had fulminant five-lobed pneumonia caused by
Legionella
pneumophila. Her clinical course was complicated by granulocytopenia. Bone marrow aspiration showed notable inhibition of myelopoiesis, involving all stages of maturation. The presence of a serum inhibitor of granulopoiesis was demonstrated by in vitro bone marrow culture. Normal bone marrow cultured in the presence of serum from two normal control subjects yielded 69 +/- 5.2 (mean +/- SE) and 61 +/- 5 granulocyte colonies. When the patient's serum was substituted for normal human serum only 14.3 +/- 2.3 colonies were formed. Each of the drugs to which she had been exposed was tested in the in vitro system, using therapeutic concentrations, and none showed significant suppression of granulocyte colony formation. These observations indicate that legionnaires' disease was associated with a serum factor that notably inhibited the growth of granulocyte colonies in this patient.
...
PMID:Myelosuppression in Legionnaires' disease. 709 51
Six sporadic cases of
Legionnaires' disease
seen over 13 months in the region of Lake Zurich (Switzerland) are reported. The disease was severe in all cases; 2 patients died while on artificial respiration; 5 patients were heavy smokers; 3 had probably acquired the infection in France. These 6 patients showed the following typical symptoms and signs: fever above 39 degrees C (6 patients), nonproductive cough (4), gastrointestinal symptoms (4), encephalopathy (4),
renal insufficiency
(5), hepatic involvement (4), bilateral pneumonia (4), and pO2 below 60 mm Hg (4). The disease was diagnosed serologically in all cases and by staining and culturing
Legionella
pneumophila from lung tissue in one case. The authors propose to treat unusual cases of pneumonia with erythromycin from the outset.
...
PMID:[Legionnaires' disease in the Lake Zurich area. Report on 6 sporadic cases]. 720 63
The
renal insufficiency
which has been described in some of
Legionnaires' Disease
, has not been characterized. We describe a patient who developed severe oligoanuric renal failure associated with
Legionnaires' Disease
. Renal biopsy revealed acute tubular necrosis.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure in legionnaires' disease: report of a case. 737 63
We performed an observational analysis of prospectively collected data on 1,474 adult patients who were hospitalized for community-acquired pneumonia; 1,169 patients were under 80 years of age and 305 (21%) patients were over 80 years ("very elderly"). Mean patient ages were 60 years in the former group and 85 years in the latter group. Severely immunosuppressed patients and nursing-home residents were not included. Comorbidities significantly associated with older age were chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic heart disease, and dementia. The most common causative organism was Streptococcus pneumoniae (23% in both groups). Aspiration pneumonia was more frequent in the very elderly (5% in younger patients versus 10% in the very elderly);
Legionella
pneumophila (8% in younger patients versus 1% in the very elderly) and atypical agents (7% in younger patients versus 1% in the very elderly) were rarely recorded in the very elderly. While very elderly patients complained less frequently of pleuritic chest pain, headache, and myalgias, they were more likely to have absence of fever and altered mental status on admission. No significant differences were observed between groups as regards incidence of classic bacterial pneumonia syndrome (60% versus 59%) in 343 patients with pneumococcal pneumonia. The development of inhospital complications (26% in younger versus 32% in very elderly patients) as well as early mortality (2% in younger versus 7% in very elderly patients) and overall mortality (6% in younger versus 15% very elderly patients) were significantly higher in very elderly patients. Acute respiratory failure and shock/multiorgan failure were the most frequent causes of death, especially of early mortality. Factors independently associated with 30-day mortality in the very elderly were altered mental status on admission (odds ratio, 3.69), shock (odds ratio, 10.69), respiratory failure (odds ratio, 3.50),
renal insufficiency
(odds ratio, 5.83), and Gram-negative pneumonia (odds ratio, 20.27).
...
PMID:Community-acquired pneumonia in very elderly patients: causative organisms, clinical characteristics, and outcomes. 1279 2
1
2
Next >>