Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026936 (Mycoplasma)
14,761 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Acute encephalitis: etiology, clinical findings and prognosis. We studied 44 patients with acute encephalitis diagnosed in a neurological university clinic during an 11-year period. An etiology was found in 11 cases (25%). In 3 the cause was herpes simplex virus; in 2 morbilli. There were single patients in which the cause was mycoplasma pneumoniae, epidemic parotitis, ornithosis, infectious mononucleosis, influenza B-virus and recent tetanus immunization. No specific etiology was found in 33 (75%). Besides fever the most frequent sign was impairment of consciousness in 39% of cases. Four patients (9%) died. Among the survivors mental and/or focal neurological deficits persisted in 22 (55%). Most frequent was dementia in 6 cases (15% of survivors). Impaired consciousness in the acute phase indicated a worse prognosis (p < 0.005).
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PMID:Acute encephalitis. 874 Nov 36

A 9-year-old female was admitted to our hospital due to a generalized seizure and consciousness disturbance. The patient had a fever and rash four days before admission, but she had no respiratory symptoms. The seizure and consciousness disturbance was prolonged and intractable. We diagnosed the patient as having encephalitis because of the increase in the cell count in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and a diffuse slow EEG wave. The computed tomography of the head was normal. The causative agent was identified as Mycoplasma pneumoniae because of the increase of antibodies, and the detection of a specific DNA with a polymerase chain reaction. The interleukin (IL)-6 level of CSF was high (384 pg/ml). In spite of intensive treatment she had severe neurological sequelae. The invasion of Mycoplasma pneumoniae to the central nervous system appeared to have a role in the development of encephalitis in the patient. We speculated that there is a possible relationship between the IL-6 levels of CSF and clinical severity of encephalitis.
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PMID:[A case of encephalitis due to Mycoplasma pneumoniae: detection of specific DNA from cerebrospinal fluid and elevation of interleukin-6]. 974 29

Pontiac fever has rarely been found in sporadic cases. Here, we report the first sporadic cases of non-pneumonic legionellosis, Pontiac fever in Japan. Case 1. A 53-year-old man with spinocerebellar degeneration was presented to our hospital. He had an acute onset of high fever and consciousness disturbance. A chest X-ray film on admission was normal, but transient bilateral pleural effusions were revealed on hospital day 14. Case 2. A 77-year-old woman with gastric ulcer was presented to our hospital. She had an acute onset of high fever. A chest X-ray film on admission was normal, but transient bilateral pleural effusions were revealed on hospital day 7. High fever, resistant to beta-lactam antibiotics, continued in both cases. Both had serologic confirmation of legionellosis by indirect fluorescent antibody assay for Legionella pneumophila without seroconversion for Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and Chlamydia pneumoniae, and had a good prognosis. Both were thought to be sporadic community-acquired cases rather than epidemics.
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PMID:First sporadic cases of non-pneumonic legionellosis, Pontiac fever in Japan. 993 28

A comparative study of 890 patients with community-acquired pneumonia requiring hospitalization in a community hospital was performed. The patients were divided into an elderly patient group and a non-elderly patient group. The elderly patients with community-acquired pneumonia exhibited frequent atypical symptoms such as dyspnea, consciousness disturbance and complication of shock, and also were frequently in a poor nutritional condition. The causative microorganism was isolated in 40.8% of the elderly patients and in 44.0% of the non-elderly patients. Polymicrobial agents were detected frequently in the elderly patients. Streptococcus pneumoniae (19.4%), MSSA (16.8%), Klebsiella pneumoniae (15.1%) and Haemophilus influenzae (15.0%) were frequently isolated from the sputum of the elderly patients, while Mycoplasma pneumoniae (25.2%), H. influenzae (15.0%), S. pneumoniae (12.2%) and MSSA (10.2%) were frequently isolated from that of the non-elderly patients. Regarding treatment with antibiotics, therapy with a single antibiotic therapy, such as cephem or carbapenem was carried out for the elderly patients, while new quinolone or tetracycline was administered to the non-elderly patients. Although the treatment with antibiotics was adequate according to the guidelines of the American Thoracic Society, the prognosis was poor; i.e.) in the elderly patients an efficacy rate of 74.3% and a mortality rate of 9.5%. In the non-elderly patients, the prognosis was good; i.e.) an efficacy rate of 88.0% and a mortality rate of 1.7%. These results suggest that the most important factors affecting the prognosis were the general condition of elderly patients and delay in an adequate diagnosis and treatment because of atypical clinical findings.
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PMID:[Clinical analysis of community-acquired pneumonia requiring hospitalization in a community hospital--comparison of elderly and non-elderly patients]. 1069 94

To clarify the characteristic features of nursing home-acquired pneumonia in our community hospital, we performed a clinical analysis of 86 patients with nursing home-acquired pneumonia. The patients were divided into young and elderly groups. In the young group cerebral palsy was the underlying disease. In the elderly group, it was cerebrovascular attack. Although there were no differences in ADL, the nutritional condition of the young group was comparatively good, the isolated microorganism consisted of mostly Mycoplasma pneumoniae and the prognosis was good. The elderly group where the nutritional condition was poor, the patients were detected by non-respiratory symptoms and risk factors such as obvious episodes of aspiration led us to be concerned about the risk factors for nursing home-acquired pneumonia. The microorganism isolated from the sputum of the elderly group was frequently a multi-drug resistant microorganism such as Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) and polymicrobial infection. Their prognosis was poor despite treatment with multiple antibiotics. In the comparative study between survivors and non-survivors in the elderly group, risk factors such as hypotension, consciousness disturbance, the extension of infiltration shadows, respiratory failure, multiple organ failure and metabolic acidosis were influenced for the prognosis, but the isolated microorganisms and the antimicrobial agents were not concerned.
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PMID:[Clinical analysis of nursing home-acquired pneumonia in a community hospital]. 1083 38

We classified 1017 patients with community-acquired pneumonia requiring hospitalization experienced in Kawasaki Medical School Kawasaki Hospital during the past 15 years into five age groups (< or = 54 years old, 55-64 years old, 65-74 years old, 75-84 years old, > or = 85 years old). With particular emphasis on the elderly patients, we then compared the clinical and microbiological findings in the five groups. The results were as follows; (1) Half of patients in the over 85 years old group were bed-ridden. (2) The proportion receiving antibiotics before hospitalization decreased with age. (3) There were striking atypical pneumonic symptoms, such as dyspnea and consciousness disturbance in the two age groups over 75 years old. (4) Hypotension (shock) increased with age. (5) Markers of nutritional conditions, such as serum protein, albumin, cholinesterase, and hypoxia remarkably increased in the two age groups over 75 years old. (6) There were no significant differences in the isolation rate of etiological microorganisms. (7) The number of polymicrobial agents in the < or = 54 years old group was lower than that in the other age groups. (8) Mycoplasma pneumoniae was most significantly higher in < or = 54 years old group, Haemophilus influenzae in patients 55-64 years old, and Streptococcus pneumoniae in both 65-74 and 75-84 years old groups. (9) The isolation rate of MSSA, gram-negative bacilli such as Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, respiratory viruses increased with age. (10) The amount of sepsis increased with age. (11) The prognosis was poor in the two groups over 75 years old because the mortality rate (over 10%) was higher that for the other age groups.
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PMID:[Clinical analysis of patients with community-acquired pneumonia requiring hospitalization classified by age group]. 1132 79