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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although a common cause of infection in animals, group C streptococci are rarely noted to be pathogenic in man. A total of 150,000 blood cultures obtained at the Mayo Clinic from 1968 to 1977 revealed group C streptococci in only eight patients. Acute bacterial endocarditis, meningitis, pheumonia, cellulitis and
bacteremia
due to group C streptococci are described in a host who had undergone immunosuppression (immunosuppressed host), and the relatively few cases previously reported are reviewed. Although severe, these infections may respond favorably to penicillin therapy. Endocarditis caused by group D streptococci is acute and destructive, and associated with early cardiac decompensation. The manifestations of cellulitis and
pneumonia
are similar to those when group A streptococci are causative organisms. Meningitis due to group C streptococci is acute and severe, and responds slowly to antimicrobial therapy. Colonization also occurs.
...
PMID:Infections due to group C streptococci in man. 43 51
In our hospital Haemophilus influenzae type B seems to be a common cause of acute childhood
pneumonia
. In the past five years, 34 children with acute Haemophilus pneumonia were identified. Although these children generally had an uncomplicated segmental
pneumonia
associated with a
bacteremia
, 13 of the children had
pneumonia
with a pleural effusion. These children with Haemophilus pneumonia represented 18% of the children hospitalized with systemic Haemophilus disease and almost a third of those hospitalized with acute bacterial pneumonia from whom the causal agent was isolated.
...
PMID:Acute Haemophilus pneumonia in childhood. 44 16
Within 4 days, two oncology patients in the Clinical Research Unit had
bacteremia
causes by group Y Neisseria meningitidis. Three additional patients, identified by prevalence survey, were found to have nasopharyngeal colonization with that serogroup, compared with only one employee (not associated with patients) and no family contacts. Infected and colonized (case) patients were located in the same or adjacent rooms but did not have close contact. A comparison of host and risk factors showed no significant differences between case patients and the other (control) patients located in the same rooms. In retrospect, the index patient, who had marked sputum production but was not isolated, had unrecognized meningococcal
pneumonia
and probably was the hospital source of a heavy, airborne dispersal of organisms to other patients. Respiratory isolation is warranted for patients with suspected N. meningitidis infection.
...
PMID:Possible nosocomial transmission of group Y Neisseria meningitidis among oncology patients. 46 60
In a prospective study, 330 consecutive children less than 24 months old coming to the emergency room of Yale-New Haven Hospital with a temperature greater than or equal to 40 C were evaluated. Nearly all patients had a white blood cell (WBC) count, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) (Wintrobe), blood culture, and chest roentgenogram. Eighty-eight percent were evaluated 24 to 48 hours later. The mean WBC count and ESR were significantly elevated in children with positive blood cultures or
pneumonia
. The risk of
bacteremia
was increased threefold and the risk of
pneumonia
was increased twofold in children with a WBC count greater than or equal to 15,000/cu mm or an ESR greater than or equal to 30 mm/hr compared to children without leukocytosis or elevated ESR. Sixty-one percent of children with
bacteremia
or
pneumonia
. 63% of children in whom these diagnoses were not apparent on physical examination, and 86% of children with otitis media complicated by
pneumonia
or
bacteremia
had either a WBC count greater than or equal to 15,000/cu mm or an ESR greater than or equal to 30 mm/hr. A WBC count greater than or equal to 15,000/cu mm and an ESR greater than or equal to 30 mm/hr were more effective than a polymorphonuclear leukocyte count greater than or equal to 10,000/cu mm and/or a band count greater than or equal to 500/cu mm in screening young children with high fever for
bacteremia
,
pneumonia
, or complicated otitis media.
...
PMID:Temperature greater than or equal to 40 C in children less than 24 months of age: a prospective study. 55 75
Fever patterns were studied prospectively in 200 consecutive patients referred for infectious disease consultation and retrospectively in 204 patients with selected infectious or noninfectious diseases. Most patients had remittent or intermittent fever, which, when due to infection, usually followed diurnal variation. Hectic fever occurred less commonly but was observed in patients with all categories of infectious or noninfectious diseases. Although hectic fevers were seen more frequently in patients who had documented
bacteremia
, there were many nonbacteremic subjects who had this pattern and others without this pattern who had
bacteremia
. Sustained fever nearly always occurred in patients with Gram-negative
pneumonia
or CNS damage, although some patients with these diseases had other patterns as well. Our data suggest that, with the possible exception of sustained fever in Gram-negative
pneumonia
or CNS damage, the fever pattern is not likely to be helpful diagnostically.
...
PMID:Fever patterns. Their lack of clinical significance. 57 77
Bacteremia
with known pathogens was documented in 28 acutely ill, febrile outpatients during a 29-month period. All of the children were previously healthy and were initially managed as outpatients. Eight patients presented with no identifiable focus of infection. Twenty patients had either otitis media or
pneumonitis
. An association between otitis media and
bacteremia
with H. influenzae type b was noted in 5 patients. Bacterial meningitis occurred subsequently in 7 patients (25%); 1 death occurred in this group. The blood culture, as an outpatient procedure, was helpful in establishing a bacterial etiology in selected children with either high fever (with or without otitis media), febrile seizures, or
pneumonia
. In addition, the positive blood culture was a vital aid in identifying the young child at risk for meningitis.
...
PMID:Bacteremia in 28 ambulatory children: relationship to pneumonitis and meningitis. 63 Jul 76
Two infants had pneumococcal
pneumonia
and
bacteremia
, complicated by pneumatocele formation. The pneumatoceles appeared during the recovery phase and were indistinguishable from those associated with staphylococcal
pneumonia
. Complete resolution occurred in both patients. Pneumatoceles occur in pneumonias caused by varied agents; therefore, determination of the cause is imperative for appropriate therapy.
...
PMID:Pneumococcal pneumonia with pneumatocele formation. 71 16
We compared WBC count greater than or equal to 15,000/cu mm (high WBC count). Wintrobe ESR greater than or equal to 30 mm/hr (high ESR), temperature greater than or equal to 40 degrees C, and positive slide tests for C-reactive protein (CRP) at a serum dilution of 1:50 in febrile, ambulatory children. The CRP test was performed with and without heat inactivation of serum. An excellent correlation was found between noninactivated and inactivated CRP test results. Since the noninactivated CRP test can be done quickly, its results would be readily available in an outpatient setting. High ESR demonstrated the best balance of specificity and sensitivity for
bacteremia
,
pneumonia
, and other possible or proved bacterial illnesses. A positive CRP test was highly specific for these diagnoses but less sensitive than an ERS greater than or equal to 30 mm/hr. Three combinations of acute-phase reactants, high WBC count and/or high ESR, high ESR and/or positive CRP test, and high WBC count and/or high ESR and/or positive CRP test performed as well as high ESR alone. Each was less specific but more sensitive than high ESR for possible or proved bacterial illnesses. The evaluation of an ambulatory, febrile child with acute-phase reactants should include at least determination of ESR.
...
PMID:Comparison of acute-phase reactants in pediatric patients with fever. 72 16
We detected a 24.6 per cent nosocomial infection rate (222 infections in 138 infants) among 904 infants hospitalized for over 48 hours in a regional newborn intensive-care during 41 months of surveillance. Surface infections accounted for 40.1 per cent of the total,
pneumonia
for 29.3 per cent,
bacteremia
for 14.0 per cent, surgical-wound infection for 8.1 per cent, urinary-tract infection for 4.5 per cent, and meningitis for 4.0 per cent. Staphylococcus aureus (47.3 per cent) and gram-negative enteric bacilli (45.1 per cent) were the most common organisms recovered. Nosocomial infection rates were significantly higher in infants with a birth weight less than 1500 g (P less than 0.001). The mortality rate in infants with any nosocomial infection was 33 per cent in contrast to 14 per cent in non-infected babies (P less than 0.001). Nosocomial infections are a major problem in newborn intensive-care units.
...
PMID:Nosocomial infections in a newborn intensive-care unit. Results of forty-one months of surveillance. 77 36
The illnesses of 40 patients with diagnoses of septicemia, cellulitis with
bacteremia
,
pneumonia
empyema, and meningitis caused by Streptococcus pyogenes, Group A, are described. Twenty-five of 27 patients (93%) without underlying disease survived, whereas only seven of 13 children (54%) with underlying disease survived. Nine of the 25 patients who were otherwise normal and who survived these infections had prolonged, complicated illnesses. Four of these patients, and one who died, had septicemia without a focus of infection at the time of admission. Streptococcus pyogenes, Group A, although very sensitive to penicillin G and other antibiotics, can cause both severe and rapidly progressive disease in children.
...
PMID:Serious group A streptococcal diseases in children. 77 44
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