Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0026986 (myelodysplastic syndrome)
14,926 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pseudomonas cepacia is a gram negative rod, having no fermentative activity on glucose. This organism was detected in the sputum, throat swab, or throat washing of 22 inpatients treated between January, 1990, and December, 1990, at the First Department of Internal Medicine, Kagawa Medical School. The primary diseases for which these 22 patients were hospitalized were leukemia in 12, malignant lymphoma in 5, lung cancer in 2, myelodysplastic syndrome in 1, and embryonal cell carcinoma in 1. Twelve of the 22 patients had episodes of pneumonia which complied clinically with the diagnostic criteria provided to facilitate the National Nosocomial Infection Study. The complication of pneumonia occurred in 7 patients with leukemia, 2 with malignant lymphoma, 2 with lung cancer, and 1 with myelodysplastic syndrome. In 10 of these 12 patients, the organism was detected before the onset of pneumonia. All 22 patients in whom the organism was demonstrated had received antibiotics. The antibiotics which was most frequently used to treat these patients 1 month before detection of Pseudomonas cepacia were amikacin and ceftizoxime, which were used in 13 patients. Of the antibiotics in which the susceptibility to Pseudomonas cepacia was, evaluated, minocycline was effective in 100% (21/21), ceftazidime in 50% (11/22), and ofloxacin in 27.3% (6/22). Physicians should be especially aware of the possibility of colonization and nosocomial respiratory infection by Pseudomonas cepacia in patients with severe underlying diseases.
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PMID:[Nosocomial respiratory infection caused by Pseudomonas cepacia in immunocompromised hosts]. 138 85

MRSA infection or colonization developed in eleven patients with neoplastic disease including malignant lymphoma (5 cases), soft tissue sarcoma (2 cases), acute myeloblastic leukemia (one), myelodysplastic syndrome (one), multiple myeloma (one), and mesothelioma (one) at our ward from October to December 1999. The infections were pneumonia (six cases), enteritis (three), bacteremia (one), and wound infection (one). Ten of 11 cases received antimicrobial agent (s) during one month before isolation of MRSA, suggesting selection of MRSA. Five cases improved and survived, but six cases died of infection. At the isolation of MRSA, the neutrophil count (NC) of the alive cases was 1, 500/microliter or more but the NC of five cases who died was less than 1,000/microliter, especially less than 100/microliter in three cases who had just received a cancer chemotherapy. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, performed in 9 cases, showed an identical DNA-pattern of MRSA in 7 cases, indicating a nosocomial infection. Our method to prevent spread of MRSA targeting solely the patients with MRSA infection was obviously unsatisfactory. We should target also the cases of MRSA colonization and make an effort to wash hands more vigorously. Furthermore, radical reformation such as increasing single sick-rooms drastically and increasing the number of nursing staff is also required.
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PMID:[Outbreak of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection or colonization among patients with neoplastic disease: a clinico-epidemiological study of 11 cases]. 1176 76