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Query: UMLS:C0027947 (neutropenia)
17,527 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We studied the clinical and pathologic features of bacterial esophagitis in three index cases identified by endoscopic biopsy and in 20 autopsy cases. Fourteen of the 23 patients had malignant hematologic conditions, aplastic anemia, or solid tumors; ten were profoundly neutropenic (white blood cell count, less than 100/mm3 [less than 0.1 X 10(9)/L]). The organisms involved in bacterial esophagitis were gram-positive cocci in 14, gram-negative bacilli in three, mixed gram-negative bacilli and gram-positive cocci in five, and gram-positive bacilli in one. Four patients had bacteremic bacterial esophagitis; all were immunocompromised, three by profound neutropenia and one by gestational prematurity. Bacteria causing bacteremic bacterial esophagitis were all gram-positive: viridans-group streptococci. Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermis, and Bacillus species. Our study suggests that bacterial esophagitis is more common than has been recognized in the past and should be considered as a potential source of bacteremia in immunocompromised patients.
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PMID:Bacterial esophagitis in immunocompromised patients. 371 32

The precise pathophysiologic mechanisms that cause the adult respiratory distress syndrome are unknown. Indirect evidence from human studies and extrapolations from animal models have suggested that phagocytic neutrophils are important in the pathogenesis of this disease. To further evaluate the role of neutrophils, the frequency of neutropenia in 18 bacteremic patients who had the adult respiratory distress syndrome was compared with that in a control group who had bacteremia alone. Three of 18 patients in the group with the adult respiratory distress syndrome were neutropenic as opposed to one of 18 in the control group (p greater than 0.6). Histologic examination of the lungs from two patients with the adult respiratory distress syndrome and neutropenia demonstrated the absence of neutrophils. It is likely that there are many pathways that lead to the adult respiratory distress syndrome. Although neutrophils may be involved in some of these processes, this study demonstrates that neutrophils are not required for the development of the syndrome. In the appropriate clinical setting, the diagnosis of the adult respiratory distress syndrome should not be excluded solely because of neutropenia.
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PMID:Adult respiratory distress syndrome in neutropenic patients. 372 99

Nineteen infants (mean +/- SD gestational age 30 +/- 2 weeks, birth weight 1.28 +/- 0.53 kg) with Staphylococcus epidermidis bacteremia were found on retrospective chart review to have had signs and symptoms of acute enterocolitis. This S. epidermidis-associated enterocolitis constituted 37% of the 51 cases of enterocolitis and 23% of the 81 cases of S. epidermidis sepsis during the study period. S. epidermidis-associated enterocolitis was relatively mild compared with other forms of enterocolitis. Although abdominal radiographs showed markedly abnormal bowel gas patterns with distended bowel loops and bowel wall edema, only one infant had pneumatosis intestinalis and none had portal venous or free intraperitoneal gas. Only three infants had neutropenia, and five had thrombocytopenia. None of these infants required surgical intervention. Although bloody stools often persisted for weeks, none of the neonates had prolonged feeding intolerance or development of a stricture. We conclude that S. epidermidis infection is commonly associated with a mild form of enterocolitis in the neonate and that this association should be considered when selecting antibiotics for therapy.
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PMID:Staphylococcus epidermidis-associated enterocolitis. 374 46

The incidence, ecology, and mortality of gram-negative bacillary bacteremia in elderly patients were studied in an analysis of 334 episodes over a four-year-period in a 489-bed North Carolina community teaching hospital, 135 (40.4%) of which occurred in patients 70 years of age or older. The bacteremia rate per 1000 hospital admissions increased sharply with increasing age. The ecology and in vitro antimicrobial susceptibilities of the bacterial isolates were strongly influenced by community v hospital acquisition, but not by age. Urosepsis was significantly more likely to be the underlying source of hospital-acquired bacteremia in patients 70 years or older (P less than 0.01). Total bacteremia-related mortality did not increase with increasing age; in the group of patients aged 70 years or older with nonfatal/ultimately fatal underlying diseases (NF/UFUD), however, mortality was 9.1% compared to 2.9% in the younger age group (P less than 0.001). Significantly increased bacteremia-related mortality was also noted in the older patients with NF/UFUD admitted from nursing homes (P less than 0.05) and those not treated with an appropriate antimicrobial agent within 24 hours (P less than 0.01). Overall, the older patients with hospital-acquired bacteremia, neutropenia-associated infection, those bacteremic from a nonurinary source of infection, and those treated with multiple-drug regimens had higher mortality (P less than 0.05). Gram-negative bacteremia is much more common in patients 70 years of age or older and compared with younger patients mortality appears to be significantly increased for the important subgroup of older patients with nonfatal or ultimately fatal underlying diseases.
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PMID:Gram-negative bacillary bacteremia in the elderly: incidence, ecology, etiology, and mortality. 381 60

Diseases affecting host defense mechanisms include neutropenia, aplastic anemia, leukemia, lymphocytopenia (B- and T-lymphocyte abnormalities), deficiencies of complement, splenectomy, diabetes mellitus, renal failure, and autoimmune diseases. Immunocompromised patients face frequent life-threatening complications of infections, particularly when they are hospitalized and receiving cytotoxic myelosuppressive drugs. Oral antimicrobial agents affect the flora of the host's alimentary tract, enhancing colonization by resistant, potentially pathogenic, strains and species, especially in a hospital environment. Nalidixic acid, oxolinic acid, pipemidic acid, polymyxins, co-trimoxazole, polyene antibiotics, and framycetin, which preserve anaerobic colon flora, do not affect the host's colonization resistance and can be given in oral doses high enough to suppress and clear susceptible potential pathogens from the intestinal tract. Such prophylactic treatment permits patients to stay hospitalized in ward conditions. In the compromised host who has fever and suspected septicemia, a decision concerning treatment should be made within an hour of notification of the patient's condition. In acute stages of life-threatening infection, the principal aim of antimicrobial chemotherapy is to provide the most potent treatment; at this stage, the accompanying side effects are less important. An essential component of therapy should be an aminoglycoside paired with a beta-lactam antibiotic. Because the incidence of staphylococcal resistance to antibiotics is high, preliminary sensitivity-testing is essential when staphylococcal sepsis threatens the life of a compromised host. Despite aggressive antibiotic therapy, more than half of immunocompromised patients and patients with severe underlying diseases die when gram-negative bacteria invade their blood. In these patients, medical or surgical removal of the septic focus is a major part of management, but plasma or plasma fractions should be given to correct hypovolemia, and an agent such as dopamine should be administered if volume replacement fails to restore adequate blood pressure. A high dose of corticosteroids should have a beneficial effect, and, for neutropenic patients with gram-negative bacteremia or fever, transfusion with functional neutrophils improves survival.
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PMID:Infections in immunocompromised patients. II. Established therapy and its limitations. 385 79

Preliminary evidence (n = 15) with semiquantitative (latex) determinations of C-reactive protein (CRP) suggested an unreliable CRP response in systemic Group B streptococcal infection. Recent experience with sequential, quantitative determinations of CRP in 10 infants surviving GBS infection documents that CRP can rise rapidly with systemic infection and fall rapidly with appropriate treatment. One infant with asymptomatic bacteremia had no increase in CRP, but in nine others with sepsis and/or meningitis the peak concentrations were from 4.2 to 31.9 mg/dl. Duration of elevated CRP ranged from 2 days in benign illness to 17 days in severe meningitis. Two infants with neurologic sequelae had concentrations greater than 20 mg/dl. Leukopenia, neutropenia and elevated immature neutrophil:total neutrophil ratio were frequently observed at the onset of infection. Leukocyte counts may be most helpful in making an early diagnosis, whereas CRP concentrations may document response, influence duration of antibiotic therapy and provide prognostic information.
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PMID:Response of C-reactive protein in neonatal Group B streptococcal infection. 388 78

To our knowledge this is the first case of hemorrhagic bullae caused by Morganella morganii septicemia. The presence of organisms in the bullae, demonstrated by Gram strain and culture, and the acral location of the bullae suggest that the skin lesions were due directly to blood-borne infection. Multiple factors predisposed this patient to gram-negative bacteremia, including lymphoma, chemotherapy, neutropenia, systemic steroids, multiple hospitalizations, and treatment with broad-spectrum antibiotics.
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PMID:Hemorrhagic bullae associated with Morganella morganii septicemia. 388 21

Vascular access technology is rapidly improving. Over the last 7 years we evaluated 826 access devices in 681 patients with neoplastic disease. The devices included 103 polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) arteriovenous (A-V) grafts, 358 Broviac 2.2-mm and 135 Hickman 3.2-mm right atrial catheters, 161 2.2-mm and 44 4.5-mm dual-lumen right atrial catheters, 12 venous infusion ports, and 13 large-bore staggered-tip dual-lumen catheters. All devices provided satisfactory venous access. Twenty-eight percent of the PTFE A-V grafts eventually thrombosed, versus 0.7% of Silastic right atrial catheters (P less than 0.005). Because of its low long-term complication rate (only 7% removed or lost because of a complication) and its simplicity of insertion and use, the Silastic right atrial catheter is now our preferred device. Most patients receive a 2.2-mm dual-lumen catheter, the second channel of which can provide a route for parenteral nutrition or blood sampling, and is a form of "insurance" if the first lumen becomes occluded. In over 95% of patients with chemotherapy-induced neutropenia and fever or bacteremia, their right atrial catheters were not removed, rather they were used for intravenous antibiotic infusions. The new larger bore dual-lumen catheters provided effective access for acute hemodialysis or plasmapheresis, as well as for routine venous access. The infusion port was particularly suitable for administration of adjuvant chemotherapy in the outpatient department, although the complexity of its use challenged the professional staff.
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PMID:Results from use of 826 vascular access devices in cancer patients. 391 83

We reviewed 410 episodes of Pseudomonas bacteremia occurring in patients with cancer during a ten-year period. Pseudomonas bacteremia was most common among patients with acute leukemia. The majority of patients acquired their infections in the hospital, and 51% had received antibiotic therapy for other presumed or proved infection during the preceding week. Shock occurred in 33%, and 32% had concomitant pneumonia. The overall cure rate was 62%; it was 67% for patients receiving appropriate antibiotics but only 14% for those receiving inappropriate antibiotics. A one- to two-day delay in the administration of appropriate antibiotic therapy reduced the cure rate from 74% to 46%. Patients who received an antipseudomonal beta-lactam antibiotic with or without an aminoglycoside had a significantly higher cure rate than patients who received only an aminoglycoside (72% and 71% vs 29%). Patients with shock, pneumonia, or persistent neutropenia had a substantially poorer prognosis.
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PMID:Pseudomonas bacteremia. Retrospective analysis of 410 episodes. 392 67

A review of 58 patients with malignancies (age range, 14-73 years), who required surgical consultation for acute abdominal pain in the setting of neutropenia (granulocyte count less than 1000/mm3) after chemotherapy was conducted. Ninety percent had fevers greater than 37.8 degrees C, 30% had diarrhea or melena, and 25% had diminished bowel sounds. Five of the 29 patients (17%) with localized pain had surgical intervention; 3 of 29 patients (10%) with generalized pain underwent operations (2 for x-ray findings). All eight of these surgically treated patients survived to leave the hospital. Eighteen of the 29 patients with generalized pain were believed to have a similar syndrome of diarrhea (occasionally heme positive) and diffuse abdominal tenderness (some with peritoneal signs and distension), which was termed "neutropenic enteropathy." Eleven of these 18 patients had their symptoms resolve with antibiotic therapy, aggressive fluid replacement, and a return of their granulocyte count to normal. The other seven died of pneumonia (two), unknown causes (one), and diffuse enterocolitis throughout the intestinal tract (four documented at autopsy). The overall 30-day mortality rate in this series was 34%. Several factors correlated significantly with mortality: hypotension at the onset of pain (80% mortality), bacteremia (63% mortality), and fungemia (100% mortality). Absolute leukocyte count and absolute platelet count did not correlate with mortality. This study reaffirms that patients with neutropenic enteropathy are best treated conservatively. Patients with surgically correctable disease were identified by specific focal findings on examination or x-ray.
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PMID:Abdominal pain in neutropenic cancer patients. 394 98


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