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Query: UMLS:C0024530 (
malaria
)
44,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A study of 741 Indonesian patients with fever was carried out in order to determine what serious febrile illnesses are prevalent in Jakarta. All patients were hospitalized primarily because of fever and were studied by bacteriological and serological methods.
Bacteremia
due to Salmonella typhi (150 cases), S. enteritidis (36 cases), or both (2 cases) was common in both children and adults. One S. enteritidis isolate was chloramphenicol resistant. Serological evidence of Salmonella infection was found in 130 additional cases without
bacteremia
. Serological evidence of arbovirus infection (94 cases) was common in children.
Malaria
was found in 12 adults, most of whom were probably infected outside Jakarta. Little serological evidence was found for rickettsial, leptospiral, Brucella, Toxoplasma gondii or a number of other infections. Clinical signs and symptoms in the febrile patients studed were generally nonspecific, and laboratory results reported were very helpful in establishing more accurate diagnoses.
...
PMID:Febrile illnesses resulting in hospital admission: a bacteriological and serological study in Jakarta, Indonesia. 76 71
Prevention of infection by the interniste is less explored than perioperative prophylaxis. Basically, prophylaxis in internal medicine may be considered in the following situations: in case of chronic recurrent infections, in case of persisting infections, after contact with a dangerous microorganism, after contact with a potentially infectious vector, during
bacteremia
or in case of an anatomical defect. For some of these situations (
malaria
, tuberculosis, rheumatic fever) clear guidelines exist which, however, are rather based on the consensus of experts than on scientific data. For other diseases (e.g. chronic recurrent urinary tract infections) clinical studies are the basis for a rational proceeding. For a third group of situations (e.g. Lyme disease, chronic bronchitis, leak of cerebrospinal fluid, implant) neither guidance nor sufficient clinical data exist. In these cases the proceeding is individual. The basis for the decision is given by clinical observations, single studies, theoretical considerations or cost-benefit analyses.
...
PMID:[Preventive use of antibiotics for internal medicine diseases]. 185 63
Between 1982 and 1986 in western Zaire, a pediatrician collected data on 206 children under 5 years old presenting at the Institute Medical Evangelique, a 400-bed mission hospital (60 pediatric beds), in Kimpese with persisting fever despite chloroquine therapy for falciparum
malaria
, a negative or scanty positive thick film for
malaria
, and no clear localizing signs of infections. The pediatrician suspected that these cases had an extraintestinal Salmonella infection and took blood, synovial fluid, and/or cerebrospinal fluid samples for diagnostic analyses. Salmonella serotypes other than Salmonella typhi (non-S. typhi) were responsible for most
bacteremia
cases (83%). The clinical features of non-S. typhi and S. typhi infections were basically the same. The case fatality rate for non-S. typhi and S. typhi an S. typhi infections were 22.7% and 29.4%, respectively. Infants under 6 months old had a significantly higher case fatality rate than older children (relative risk [RR] = 1.7; p .0005; e.g., 66% and 100% for infants under 3 months old). Meningitis was significantly associated with increased mortality, regardless of age (RR = 4.68). Jaundice was the only clinical sign significantly linked to increased mortality (RR = 2.35), especially among children who had S. typhi infection (80%). Mortality occurred significantly more often when children fell ill with Salmonella bacteremia in the late rainy season, coinciding with the peak of malnutrition, than in the dry season (RR = 2.62). Chloramphenicol-resistant non-S. typhi isolated were significantly associated with increased mortality (RR = 3.19). Hemoglobin levels below 6 g (i.e. severe anemia) has a strong link to increased mortality (RR = 1.77). Salmonella bacteremia will become more difficult to treat as antibiotic resistance and the prevalence of HIV infection increases in African countries.
...
PMID:Salmonella bacteraemia among young children at a rural hospital in western Zaire. 768 45
Fever in travelers or immigrants from the tropics is an increasingly common problem facing physicians in urban centers of North America.
Malaria
and typhoid fever are endemic in developing countries and affect millions of people annually. An association between falciparum
malaria
and salmonella
bacteremia
has been noted for many years, although the underlying mechanisms have not been fully elucidated. We report on two travelers with falciparum
malaria
and concomitant salmonella
bacteremia
and review the possible mechanisms that may explain this association.
...
PMID:Concurrent falciparum malaria and Salmonella bacteremia in travelers: report of two cases. 775 1
In three studies, in Ghana and Kenya, blood from 639 patients admitted with fever was cultured. Standard treatments were antimalarials (54-100%) and antibiotics (39-90%). According to the criteria in use, however, only 10-31% had
malaria
alone; of those who received antibiotics, 66% were diagnosed with
malaria
, gastrointestinal infections, post-operative recuperations, circulatory problems, central nervous system disorders or FUO, and did not need antibiotics at the first encounter. For those with wounds and abscesses (8%), generalised antibiotic treatment can also be questioned.
Bacteraemia
was found in 71 (11.3%) patients; in the HIV patients, however, 5 (23%) of 22 had bacteraemia. This is a minimum incidence, since culture techniques were not optimal for the isolation of fastidious microorganisms. The most prevalent organisms isolated were Salmonella, Klebsiella/Enterobacter and S. aureus. Resistance (intrinsic and extrinsic) in the Gram- bacteria was high: 31-100% were resistant to amoxycillin, 0-80% to cotrimoxazole, 15-95% to chloramphenicol and 9-15% to gentamicin. The need for cultures and sensitivity tests for patients with prolonged or undiagnosed fever is stressed. Specific treatment should be given only when infections, whether malarial or bacterial, have been positively diagnosed.
...
PMID:Bacteraemia in patients presenting with fever. 779 50
Bacteremia
was documented in 14 of 156 previously healthy children with temperatures of at least 40.0 degrees C but without focal signs, seen in an emergency department; 116 children had
malaria
, and no infections were identified in 26. Concurrent
malaria
infection was frequent in children with
bacteremia
. The highly febrile child without focal signs in the tropics requires evaluation for
bacteremia
even when a diagnosis of
malaria
has been confirmed.
...
PMID:Acute fevers of unknown origin in young children in the tropics. 841 18
Researchers prospectively studied 264 children aged less than 5 years with diarrhea who were admitted to the Bouake Regional Hospital Center in the Ivory Coast between June 10 and August 11, 1991, to identify clinical disorders associated with severe diarrhea. They compared data on the 196 children with non-severe diarrhea with data on 68 children with severe diarrhea. All but three of the children were breast fed. The severely ill children were more likely than the non-severely ill children to have dehydration (45% vs. 11%; p 0.01), severe wasting (22% vs. 7%; p 0.01), anemia (29% vs. 13%; p = 0.01),
bacteremia
(26% vs. 9%; p 0.01), and malarial parasitemia (27% vs. 14%; p = 0.02). 68% of the blood isolates had nontyphoidal Salmonella spp. 6% of children had HIV-1 or HIV-2 infection. The most common pathogens in the stool specimens were rotavirus (41 cases), Campylobacter jejuni (22), Shigella spp. (21), and Salmonella spp (10). These findings indicate a need for a more comprehensive approach to assessment and management of children with diarrhea that secures immediate recognition of
bacteremia
, anemia, wasting,
malaria
, and dehydration.
...
PMID:Severe illness in African children with diarrhoea: implications for case management strategies. 890 71
As part of a treatment trial of cerebral
malaria
, blood cultures were done in 276 Gambian children, aged between 1 and 9 years, with cerebral
malaria
. Fourteen (5%) of these were positive. The organisms isolated were Staphylococcus aureus (6), coliforms (4), Pseudomonas spp. (2), Salmonella spp. (1) and Streptococcus spp. (1). Thirteen of these children survived, most without appropriate antibiotic treatment. Most of the retrieved organisms were therefore suspected to be contaminants.
Bacteraemia
complicating cerebral
malaria
is not common in The Gambia, and routine antibiotic treatment of children with cerebral
malaria
is not warranted.
...
PMID:Bacteraemia in cerebral malaria. 992 81
The diagnostic value of an acute-phase single-tube Widal test for suspected typhoid fever was evaluated with 2,000 Vietnamese patients admitted to an infectious disease referral hospital between 1993 and 1998. Test patients had suspected typhoid fever and a blood culture positive for Salmonella typhi (n= 1,400) or Salmonella paratyphi A (n = 45). Control patients had a febrile illness for which another cause was confirmed (
malaria
[n = 103], dengue [n = 76], or
bacteremia
due to another microorganism [n = 156] or tetanus (n = 265). An O-agglutinin titer of >/=100 was found in 18% of the febrile controls and 7% of the tetanus patients. Corresponding values for H agglutinins were 8 and 1%, respectively. The O-agglutinin titer was >/=100 in 83% of the blood culture-positive typhoid fever cases, and the H-agglutinin titer was >/=100 in 67%. The disease prevalence in investigated patients in this hospital was 30.8% (95% confidence interval, 26.8 to 35.1%); at this prevalence, an elevated level of H agglutinins gave better positive predictive values for typhoid fever than did O agglutinins. With a cutoff titer of >/=200 for O agglutinin or >/=100 for H agglutinin, the Widal test would diagnose correctly 74% of the blood culture-positive cases of typhoid fever. However, 14% of the positive results would be false-positive, and 10% of the negative results would be false-negative. The Widal test can be helpful in the laboratory diagnosis of typhoid fever in Vietnam if interpreted with care.
...
PMID:Value of a single-tube widal test in diagnosis of typhoid fever in Vietnam. 1044 69
Bacteraemia
associated with severe
malaria
in childhood is a sporadically reported phenomenon but its incidence and clinical importance are unknown. We have reviewed clinical and laboratory data from 783 Kenyan children sequentially admitted with a primary diagnosis of severe
malaria
. The overall incidence of bacteraemia in children with severe
malaria
was 7.8% (95% CI 5.5-10.0); however, in children under 30 months of age the incidence was 12.0% (95% CI 8.3-15.7). The presence of bacteraemia was associated with a 3-fold increase in mortality (33.3% vs. 10.4%, P < 0.001). We conclude that invasive bacterial disease may contribute to the pathophysiology of the clinical syndrome of severe
malaria
in an important subgroup of children. We recommend that young children with severe
malaria
be treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics in addition to antimalarial drugs.
...
PMID:Bacteraemia complicating severe malaria in children. 1049 60
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