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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Acinetobacter calcoaceticus var anitratus, a nonfermentative grampnegative bacillus, has been infrequently reported as a cause of community-acquired pneumonia. In this paper we describe the course of six recent patients with community-acquired, bacteremic pneumonia due to this organism and review the six previously reported cases. Our experience suggests this organism is a more common cause of community-acquired pneumonia than previously thought. Acinetobacter pneumonia occurs in older persons with chronic disease, especially alcoholism. It is a fulminant illness with respiratory distress, hypoxemia, leukopenia and shock. Chest roentgenograms reveal a lobar or bronchopneumonic infiltrate which often becomes bilateral within 24 hours of admission to the hospital. Pleural effusions are common. The mortality rate is 43 per cent. Factors that predict a fatal outcome are granulocytopenia, empyema and therapy with inappropriate antibiotics. Therapy with appropriate antibiotics, especially carbenicillin and an aminoglycoside, increases survival.
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PMID:Community-acquired acinetobacter pneumonia. 46 16

This case illustrates progressive anaerobic pleuropulmonary infection caused by Bifidobacterium eriksonii that eventually was fatal. Aspiration pneumonia, lung abscess, empyema, and finally necrotizing pneumonia characterized the clinical course. The organism is difficult to recover, but there is reason to suspect that it may be of greater etiologic importance than heretofore recognized in debilitated patients with pleuropulmonary infections. This patient was a 52-year-old alcoholic with periodontal disease. Both conditions are well-known factors underlying anaerobic pleuropulmonary infection. Alcoholism probably predisposed the patient to aspiration of oral secretions, the likely source of the infection.
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PMID:Case report: fatal anaerobic pulmonary infection due to Bifidobacterium eriksonii. 62 49

Twenty-four cases of Hemophilus influenzae pneumonia diagnosed by positive blood or pleural fluid cultures are compared to 43 cases previously reported in the literatrue. Frequently associated illnesses in both series include alcoholism, chronic airways obstruction and preceding respiratory tract infection. Moderate temperature elevation and slight leukocytosis were common on admission in both groups. Chest roentgenograms in our series revealed both bronchopneumonia (75 per cent) and lobar consolidation (38 per cent). Pleural disease occurred frequently, with two empyemas noted on admission and nine additional effusions developing during therapy. Treatment of choice was ampicillin. All five patients who did not receive ampicillin died, whereas 16 to 19 who received this drug survived. High mortality (33 per cent) in our series may be attributed to the advanced age of the patients and the presence of associated illnesses. In addition, a 10 year review suggests a true increase in the incidence of H. influenzae pneumonia in adults.
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PMID:Bacteremic hemophilus influenzae pneumonia in adults. A report of 24 cases and a review of the literature. 83 1

Physicians must remain attuned to the increased incidence of infectious complications in alcoholics as compared with the general population. Prompt diagnosis and vigorous early treatment of pneumonia and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis may reverse and otherwise grave prognosis. Althought many mechanisms of host defenses seem affected by alcohol ingestion, the precise mechanisms of increased bacterial susceptibility in alcoholism remain unclear.
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PMID:Infectious complications of alcoholism. 85 47

To determine the characteristics of the radiographic resolution of bacteremic Streptococcus pneumoniae pneumonia we examined serial chest roentgenograms in 72 patients. Consolidation disappeared in all patients by eight to 10 weeks; volume loss (9 per cent), plural disease (9 per cent), and stranding (19 per cent) often persisted beyond eight weeks. Resolution occurred earlier in patients less than 50 years old (P less than 0.05) and in the absence of alcoholism and underlying airways disease regardless of age (P less than 0.05). Delayed clearing occurred when these complicating factors were present in patients over 50. Lung cancer was not responsible for delayed resolution of pneumonia. We conclude that an appropriate interval for serial radiographic examinations after therapy for pneumococcal pneumonia is six weeks.
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PMID:The radiographic resolution of Streptococcus pneumoniae pneumonia. 116 Sep 71

Although in demand, there is only limited information available regarding the patterns of mortality among Natives in Canada. Mortality rates for residents of Canadian Indian Reserves (IRs) and Registered Indians were calculated for the periods 1979-1988 and 1981 respectively. Proportionate mortality ratios and age-standardized mortality rates for residents of Indian Reserves were similar to those obtained for Registered Indians. Standardized mortality ratios were calculated using both Canadian mortality and mortality in selected isolated rural populations as references. Dramatically increased risks were observed among Native populations for mortality from alcoholism/liver cirrhosis, homicide, suicide and pneumonia. While SMRs calculated using mortality rates in rural populations appeared to be preferable to those using Canadian rates, the use of Canadian rates does not alter the conclusion that IRs have significantly elevated mortality from environmental and social causes which, although improving, require continuing control efforts.
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PMID:Indian Reserve and registered Indian mortality in Canada. 147 61

This study is based on data on autopsies performed at the Institute of Forensic Medicine, National Hospital, Oslo, in 1989. Solitary men and women were compared with non-solitary men and women with respect to causes of death and manner of death. Solitary men died more often from potentially curable diseases, especially pneumonia. These individuals had often suffered from chronic alcoholism and had lived in central Oslo. Among women there were no differences in the causes of death of solitary and non-solitary individuals.
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PMID:[Living and dying alone. An epidemiological study of deaths outside institutions in Oslo in 1989]. 155 24

Eleven cases of blood culture-positive, community-acquired pneumonia due to the human commensal Acinetobacter baumannii were studied in Darwin in the Northern Territory of Australia during the 10-year period from March 1981 through February 1991. Demographic risk factors included male gender, age of greater than 45 years, and Aboriginal ethnic background. Multiple clinical risk factors, including cigarette smoking, alcoholism, chronic obstructive airway disease, and diabetes mellitus, were noted in all cases and contributed to the high mortality (64%). In all cases pneumonia was clinically fulminant. A fatal outcome was strongly associated with inappropriate initial antibiotic therapy. All tested isolates of Acinetobacter were sensitive to gentamicin and resistant to cefotaxime. The 34 previously reported cases of community-acquired acinetobacter pneumonia are reviewed, and appropriate therapeutic regimens are identified.
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PMID:Community-acquired Acinetobacter pneumonia in the Northern Territory of Australia. 826 77

During an 8 year prospective study of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) requiring hospitalisation we found that 47 of 1118 (4.2%) patients had Streptococcus pneumoniae bacteraemia. Females outnumbered males 27:20. The mean age was 63.4 years and 25% of our patients were admitted from a nursing home. A comparison with the 1071 other patients with CAP showed that patients with bacteraemic pneumococcal pneumonia (BPP) were more likely to be female and to have alcoholism, diabetes mellitus, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease as co-morbidities. The mortality rate of 19% in BPP was not significantly lower than the 22% rate for the remaining patients with CAP. Four of the nine (44%) patients with BPP who died, did so within 24 h of admission, compared with 29 of 236 (12.3%) (P less than 0.02) who died of CAP. A notable clinical feature was the absence of cough in 19% while overall in only 66% was the cough productive. Most of the patients had a non-specific clinical presentation. Fifty-three per cent had an uncomplicated stay in hospital. We conclude that bacteraemic pneumococcal pneumonia is a continuously evolving disease and for the first time may now be more common in women.
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PMID:Bacteraemic pneumococcal pneumonia: a continuously evolving disease. 160 45

Despite the generally salutary experience in recent years of managing suppurative pleuropulmonary disease, empyemas and lung abscesses have persisted and increased in incidence in hospitals such as Queens Hospital Center that serve large numbers of the socioeconomically disadvantaged. This study documents the etiology, clinical presentation, treatment, and treatment results of suppurative pleuropulmonary disease at Queens Hospital Center, which serves a large segment of the urban poor, many of whom are black. Results indicate that contributory or antecedent etiologic factors include a history of prior disease (specifically pneumonia, lung abscess, obstructive lung disease, pulmonary neoplasia, and tuberculosis); a predisposition to constitutional or immunologic deficiencies (specifically, alcoholism, anemia/malnutrition, drug abuse, and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome [AIDS]); conditions contributing to tracheobronchial aspiration (specifically, alcoholism and seizure disorders); and a miscellaneous group such as prior surgery, cardiovascular disease, and sepsis syndrome. The patients in this study were young with maximal incidence occurring in the third to fifth decades of life. Patients were predominantly male (75%) and black (66%). There were 18 deaths (23%), with sepsis being the cause in 10 (56%). Most surgical interventions were conservative, ie, bronchoscopies (48), thoracenteses (43), and tube thoracotomies (39). Thirty-one open thoracotomies were performed for drainage, decortication, or pulmonary resection. The surgical mortality was three cases or 5% of the patients who underwent surgery. The designated incidence of proven AIDS in this series (29%) was low, undoubtedly because many patients refused testing, and the multiple gram-positive and gram-negative infections that were seen did not conform to the Centers for Disease Control criteria for diagnosis and case reporting for AIDS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The role of surgery in treating pleuropulmonary suppurative disease--review of 77 cases managed at Queens Hospital Center between 1986 and 1989. 160 13


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