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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Chlamydiae are among the most successful bacterial pathogens, and there are few branches of medicine on which chlamydial infection and its sequelae do not impinge. Chlamydia trachomatis is responsible for many million cases of blindness, pelvic inflammatory disease, urethritis, epididymitis, infertility and ectopic pregnancy annually; it also causes lymphogranuloma venereum, reactive arthritis,
ophthalmia
neonatorum and infantile
pneumonia
. C. pneumoniae is among the most common causes of community-acquired
pneumonia
, and recent evidence suggests that it may play a part in the pathogenesis of coronary heart disease. C. psittaci is a highly prevalent zoonotic infection with a wide host range. It is of great economic importance, and causes sporadic but sometimes devastating disease in humans. Most chlamydial infections are subclinical, but even if the initial illness is mild there may be serious long-term sequelae. It is therefore important to identify and treat chlamydial infections in their early stages, but diagnosis usually depends on laboratory tests. Recent trials have shown that single doses of the long-acting macrolide azithromycin are effective in the treatment of genital and ocular C. trachomatis infection, but longer courses of antimicrobials remain the mainstay of treatment for C. pneumoniae and C. psittaci infections.
...
PMID:Chlamydial infections. 791
Non-anthracis Bacillus species associated with clinical infections are usually dismissed as contaminants or nonpathogens. As opportunists, however, Bacillus organisms can cause significant systemic infections including bacteremia,
endophthalmitis
, and
pneumonia
. Osteomyelitis with non-anthracis Bacillus organisms has been described in adults, although to our knowledge it has been described only once in a child. We report a case of chronic osteomyelitis due to Staphylococcus aureus and superinfection with Bacillus cereus in a 13-year-old adolescent. A Bacillus isolate should be considered a true pathogen in children with chronic osteomyelitis who have a poor clinical response to antistaphylococcal therapy.
...
PMID:Osteomyelitis due to Bacillus cereus in an adolescent: case report and review. 808 44
Meningococcal infections can present in diverse clinical forms ranging from fulminant, occult, chronic meningococcaemia to meningitis. Rare presentations may include conjunctivitis, sinusitis,
pneumonia
, pericarditis, arthritis, and osteomyelitis. We present a very unusual case of meningococcaemia presented as an
endophthalmitis
.
...
PMID:Endophthalmitis as a presentation of meningococcal septicaemia. 811 85
WHO estimates 250 million new cases worldwide of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) each year. STDs of growing concern are chlamydial infections responsible for pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) in women and
pneumonia
and
ophthalmia
in newborns, and incurable viral infections, including Herpes simplex virus, human papilloma virus (HPV), hepatitis B virus, and HIV infection. HPV types 16 and 18 are associated with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia, one of the most serious complication of STDs. PID is another serious STD complication because it tends to recur and causes chronic abdominal pain, eventually resulting in hysterectomy, infertility, ectopic pregnancy, or chronic backache. STDs adversely affect pregnancy, often leading to ectopic pregnancy, stillbirth, prematurity, congenital and perinatal infections, and puerperal maternal infections. Genital ulcer diseases, e.g., chancroid, facilitate HIV transmission. HIV infection boosts the virulence of STD pathogens, e.g., Herpes simplex virus. Many people with STDs are asymptomatic and the clinical profile of STDs is always in flux, thus resulting in less than optimal case detection. Obstacles of STD treatment include antibiotic resistance of betalactamase-producing Neisseria gonorrhoea strains and the immunocompromising effect of HIV infections. Tourists are responsible for introducing HIV infection into many countries. Some countries (e.g., Saudi Arabia) require a negative HIV test before foreigners can work in those countries. Health resources are not keeping up with the spread of STDs and HIV. Governments should embark on health education campaigns to stem the spread of HIV. They should also integrate AIDS prevention with the control of other STDs.
...
PMID:Sexually transmitted diseases in the age of AIDS. 847 83
We report the case of a 66-year-old black woman who presented with concomitant acute infectious keratitis, bacteremia, and septic arthritis caused by Streptococcus
pneumonia
. The septic arthritis resolved rapidly with surgical drainage and intravenous antibiotics, but despite aggressive topical and intravenous antibiotic therapy for the infectious keratitis, the cornea perforated, the patient developed
endophthalmitis
, and the eye eventually was eviscerated. To the best of our knowledge this is the first reported case of this nature. This patient had undergone splenectomy > 50 years prior to developing these infections. Although the risk of serious infection in clinically significant bacteremia is greatest in the perioperative period after splenectomy, these patients are at increased risk of such events for a lifetime. Because encapsulated bacteria, especially Pneumococcus, pose the greatest risk of sepsis and infection in asplenic patients, pneumococcal vaccination of penicillin prophylaxis must always be considered in these patients. A careful and complete medical history and systemic evaluation remain a crucial element of the evaluation and management of serious infectious keratitis.
...
PMID:Pneumococcal keratitis, bacteremia, and septic arthritis in an asplenic patient. 877 71
Hafnia alvei is a gram-negative bacterium that is rarely isolated from human specimens and is rarely considered to be pathogenic. It has been associated with gastroenteritis, meningitis, bacteremia,
pneumonia
, nosocomial wound infections,
endophthalmitis
, and a buttock abscess. We studied 80 H. alvei isolates recovered from 61 patients within a period of 30 months. H. alvei was cultured from sites that included the respiratory tract (n = 38), the gastrointestinal tract (n = 16), and the urogenital tract (n = 12); the organism was found in blood cultures (n = 8), on central venous catheters (n = 3), and on the skin (n = 3). Only 25% of H. alvei isolates were recovered in pure cultures. Fifty-seven (93.4%) of the patients had an underlying illness. H. alvei proved to be the etiologic agent in two episodes of septicemia and in one episode of peritonitis and was probably responsible for septicemia in two other patients and
pneumonia
in one. All six of these patients recovered after receiving antibiotic treatment and/or standard surgical treatment, when needed. Three of these infections were nosocomial, and three were community acquired. Of the strains of H. alvei tested in our study, 100% were susceptible to netilmicin, ciprofloxacin, and imipenem; 92% were susceptible to piperacillin; 90% were susceptible to co-trimoxazole; and 88% were susceptible to ceftriaxone and ceftazidime. In this study, we found H. alvei to be a rare significant etiologic agent of nosocomial and community-acquired infections.
...
PMID:Clinical significance of extraintestinal Hafnia alvei isolates from 61 patients and review of the literature. 878 7
Our patient, an 83-year-old man, suddenly experienced acute lumbago and was prescribed bed rest. Later,
pneumonia
was diagnosed, even though he had no predisposing illness, and
endophthalmitis
developed in both eyes. Cultures of anterior chamber and vitreous specimens were positive for group B streptococcus. Treatment with systemic antibiotics, to which this bacteria is sensitive, was begun and his condition gradually improved. Nevertheless, the patient became blind in his right eye and the eye was enucleated. Histopathologic examination showed metastatic
endophthalmitis
with retinal detachment. Multiple microabscesses were found in the thickened choroid. We speculated that organisms disseminating from the microabscesses had caused the metastatic
endophthalmitis
.
...
PMID:Group B streptococcal metastatic endophthalmitis in an elderly man without predisposing illness. 974 72
Clinical charts of 2,398 consecutive HIV-infected patients hospitalized over an 8-year period were reviewed retrospectively to identify all cases of Serratia infection and to evaluate the occurrence and outcome of these cases according to several epidemiological. clinical, and laboratory parameters. Seventeen of 2,398 (0.71%) patients developed Serratia marcescens infections: nine had septicaemia, six had
pneumonia
, one had a lymph node abscess, and one had cellulitis. All patients were severely immunocompromised, as evidenced by a mean CD4+ lymphocyte count of < 70 cells/microl and a frequent diagnosis of AIDS (13 patients). When compared with other disease localizations, septicaemia was related to a significantly lower CD4+ cell count and a more frequent occurrence of neutropaenia. Antibiotic, corticosteroid, or cotrimoxazole treatment was frequently carried out during the month preceding disease onset. Hospital-acquired Serratia spp. infection was more frequent than community-acquired infection and was significantly related to AIDS, neutropaenia, and sepsis. Antimicrobial sensitivity testing showed complete resistance to ampicillin and cephalothin but elevated susceptibility to ureidopenicillins, second- and third-generation cephalosporins, aminoglycosides, quinolones, and cotrimoxazole. An appropriate antimicrobial treatment attained clinical and microbiological cure in all cases, in absence of related mortality or relapses. Since only 13 episodes of HIV-associated Serratia spp. infection have been described until now in nine different reports (7 patients with
pneumonia
, 3 with sepsis, 1 with
endophthalmitis
, 1 with perifolliculitis, and 1 with cholecystitis), our series represents the largest one dealing with Serratia marcescens infection during HIV disease. Serratia marcescens may be responsible for appreciable morbidity among patients with HIV disease, especially when a low CD4 + cell count, neutropaenia, and hospitalization are present. The clinician and the microbiologist facing a severely immunocompromised HIV-infected patient with a suspected bacterial disease should consider the Serratia spp. organisms. In fact, a rapid diagnosis and an adequate and timely treatment can avoid disease relapses and mortality.
...
PMID:Clinical and microbiological survey of Serratia marcescens infection during HIV disease. 1083 12
Pediatric endogenous
endophthalmitis
is a rare disease that can cause serious ophthalmic damage. We describe two cases of pediatric endogenous
endophthalmitis
. The first occurred in an 8-month-old boy and the second in a 7-day-old girl. These two patients had developed
pneumonia
due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection prior to the onset of ocular symptoms. The interval between the onset of
pneumonia
and ocular symptoms was 1 week, but
endophthalmitis
was diagnosed 9 days after the onset of ocular symptoms in the first case and 3 days after the onset of ocular symptoms in the second case. The ocular manifestations included eyelid swelling, purulent discharge, redness, corneal edema, hypopyon, and poor red reflex. Despite treatment with aggressive antimicrobial therapy, both patients became totally blind with eyeball atrophy.
...
PMID:Pediatric endogenous endophthalmitis. 1087 Mar 37
Pseudomonas aeruginosa nowadays is encountered among the leading pathogen in (i) ICU
pneumonia
; (ii) nosocomial bacteremia and AIDS primary bacteremia; (iii) iv drug users endocarditis; (iv) exacerbations of cystis fibrosis; (v) malignant external otitis and 'swimmers's ear', and (vi) contact lenses keratitis and traumatic
endophthalmitis
. The most vulnerable nosocomial hosts are the neutropenics and the mechanically ventilated patients in whom mortality rate exceeds 30%. Virulence of P. aeruginosa is attributed to the elaboration of various enzymes and toxins. There is also worldwide emergence of multiresistant phenotypes to antipseudomonal antibiotics. Therapeutic guidelines should therefore be based on (i) continuous resistance surveillance; (ii) in vitro synergistic interactions of antibacterial agents; (iii) pharmacodynamic properties of antibiotics interpreted by optimal dosing and appropriate frequency of administration; and (iv) current information on the necessity for combination therapy using an aminoglycoside.
...
PMID:Therapeutic guidelines for Pseudomonas aeruginosa infections. 1105 88
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