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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
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Haemophilus influenzae type b is a human bacterial pathogen that causes approximately 12,000 cases of H influenzae type b meningitis and 7500 cases of other forms of invasive disease annually in the United States. This organism is the leading cause of bacterial meningitis in the United States. The cause of meningitis can be established more accurately than that of other forms of invasive bacterial disease because the isolation of the bacterium from the cerebrospinal fluid or blood and/or the detection of bacterial antigen can correctly attribute the infection to a specific bacterial agent and dictate appropriate antimicrobial therapy. In children, more than 95% of all invasive diseases attributable to Haemophilus species, including septicemia, pneumonia, epiglottis, cellulitis, arthritis, osteomyelitis, and pericarditis, are due to H influenzae type b. It has been estimated that systemic disease caused by H influenzae type b occurs in approximately 1 in 200 children in the United States before the age of five. The case fatality rate for H influenzae type b meningitis is approximately 5%, and substantial morbidity has also been documented to result from central nervous system infection with this agent. Of surviving children reported in a 1969 paper, 40% had significant neurologic sequelae after meningitis. A more recent study demonstrated substantial neurologic improvement during the first few months after hospitalization, but at 1 year of age 8% of the children had neurologic or intellectual sequelae of their meningitis. Milder defects with an array of developmental problems have been reported in as many as one third to one half of all survivors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Epidemiology of Haemophilus influenzae type b infections. 217 52

The third-generation cephalosporins are useful for empiric therapy of most of the severe infections in adults as a result of their broad spectrum of antimicrobial activity (particularly against clinically important gram-negative bacteria), good tissue penetration, and lack of serious adverse effects. This review examines their use in respiratory tract infections, bacterial meningitis, skin-structure infections, and urinary tract infections in adult patients. Penicillin G remains the optimal therapy for severe community-acquired pneumonia, since Streptococcus pneumoniae still accounts for the majority of cases. However, for empiric treatment of nosocomial pneumonia, therapy must ensure coverage both of aerobic gram-negative bacilli and Staphylococcus aureus. The choice of empiric antibiotic therapy in the treatment of urinary tract infections depends on the pattern of resistance in the patient's environment. At present, the treatment of bacterial meningitis in otherwise healthy adults does not constitute a major problem provided that penicillin resistance among pneumococci and meningococci (responsible for at least 80 percent of cases) does not become a clinical problem. However, in meningitis in which gram-negative bacilli are suspected and where specific problems include antibiotic resistance among these organisms and the inadequate penetration of many antibiotics into the cerebrospinal fluid, third-generation cephalosporins are the drugs of choice, and they have markedly improved the clinical outcome. Most skin-structure infections are due to S. aureus and are best treated by an anti-staphylococcal penicillin or an older cephalosporin. Nevertheless, the third-generation cephalosporins have proved to be highly effective agents for infections of skin and soft-tissue infections associated with both gram-positive and gram-negative pathogens in patients at risk from these organisms or in the elderly.
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PMID:Empiric therapy of severe infections in adults. 218 4

Haemophilus influenzae is a gram-negative rod, causing severe infections in childhood, including meningitis, sepsis, epiglottits, pneumonia and otitis. Most of the invasive infections are due to serotype b. Since ampicillin-resistance is increasing, modern cephalosporines like cefotaxime and ceftriaxone are the antibiotics of choice in severe disease. Bacterial meningitis due to Haemophilus influenzae and epiglottitis are both still life-threatening diseases with a lethality of 5% to 25%, and there are severe sequelae in 35% of meningitis cases. Efforts have been made to develop efficacious vaccines. While immunogenicity of type b polysaccharide was low in the high-risk age (below 18 months), conjugated vaccines with either diphtheria-toxoid or Neisseria meningitis outer membrane protein and the Hib polysaccharide were found to be strongly immunogenic even in the first months of life. These vaccines show every few side-effects and can easily be combined with other immunizations such as DPT and DT. Thus, the incidence of invasive infections due to Haemophilus influenzae type b might decline in future.
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PMID:[Haemophilus influenzae type B. Disease and prevention]. 219 58

Thrombocytosis is seen in association with many conditions, including infectious diseases. We studied thrombocytosis after severe bacterial infections, particularly pneumonia with empyema in children. A systematic survey of the phenomenon was conducted. Twenty-seven children admitted for pneumonia with empyema were studied. Thrombocytosis (platelet counts greater than 500 x 10(3)/microliters) was present in 92.5%. Platelet counts reached their maximum at 15.1 +/- 3.7 days (range, 7 to 25) and declined to normal after 3 weeks of illness. Compared with a healthy control group, significant thrombocytosis, but of lower incidence, was also noted in children with lobar pneumonia without pleural effusion, bacterial meningitis and osteomyelitis. Platelet functions were examined in seven of the children but no abnormalities were observed. Bone marrow aspiration of three children with pneumonia and empyema showed megakaryocytic hyperplasia. We found no correlation between thrombocytosis, neutrophilia, fever, the clinical course, complications, prognosis or treatment. Neither thromboembolic nor hemorrhagic phenomena were observed.
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PMID:Thrombocytosis after pneumonia with empyema and other bacterial infections in children. 223 45

A retrospective review of charts for 650 children who had lumbar puncture for suspected meningitis was undertaken to determine the characteristics of patients with and without meningitis, identify other conditions suggesting meningitis, and evaluate the predictive value of signs and symptoms of meningitis. The incidence of positive lumbar punctures increased with patient age. Younger infants did not present with classical features of meningitis. Bulging fontanel, lethargy, and irritability were nonspecific symptoms. Vomiting and headache, although not specific, proved to be more sensitive indicators of meningeal infection. Most patients with meningitis (75%) had at least one sign of meningeal irritation, but so did 25% of patients without meningitis. Brudzinski's sign was not specific. In contrast, nuchal rigidity and Kernig's sign had high predictive value. Up to age five, the diseases most often suggesting meningitis were right-sided pneumonia, gastroenteritis, otitis, tonsillitis, exanthema subitum, and urinary tract infections. Of 171 patients with febrile convulsion, one (0.5%) had bacterial meningitis and four had aseptic meningitis.
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PMID:Diseases that mimic meningitis. Analysis of 650 lumbar punctures. 220 11

Screening tests have had a major role in the diagnostic microbiology laboratory during recent years. Many factors have contributed to the increased use of these methods. The primary factor is the need for rapid detection and identification of the etiologic agent in life-threatening infections, which include bacterial meningitis, infective endocarditis and septicemia, and pneumonia. Various direct screening methods are also available for eliminating negative specimens rapidly. These methods have had an impact on laboratory work flow and the outpatient population by eliminating the possibility of bacterial infections of the urinary, upper respiratory, and gastrointestinal tracts. Screening methods have also been applied to isolated colonies for the rapid differentiation and identification of certain groups of organisms. Finally, many of these screening methods have contributed to cost-savings for both the laboratory and the patient. In this era of prospective pricing, and until the entrance of biotechnology into the diagnostic microbiology laboratory, the microbiologist must rely upon these rapid, inexpensive screening procedures. The role of these screening tests in the diagnostic microbiology laboratory and their impact on patient care and cost are reviewed herein.
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PMID:Role of screening tests in rapid testing. 242 68

In order to study the causes of prolonged and secondary fever in bacterial meningitis, a group of 102 infants and children with proven bacterial meningitis were studied. The causative agent was Haemophilus influenzae in 58% of patients, Streptococcus pneumoniae in 25% and Neisseria meningitidis in 17%. Prolonged fever was observed in 12% of the patients. The established causes include, in order of frequency, subdural effusion, drug fever, otitis media, gastroenteritis and urinary tract infection. Secondary fever was noted in 18% of the patients. The causes, in order of frequency, were urinary tract infection, subdural effusion, otitis media, phlebitis, pneumonia and drug fever. Neither relapse of the meningitis nor inadequate response to antibiotic therapy was the cause for prolonged or secondary fever. Neurological sequalae were observed in 21 patients. There was no correlation between prolonged or secondary fever and neurological sequalae. We conclude that prolonged and secondary fever in patients with treated bacterial meningitis is rarely caused by the primary infection.
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PMID:Prolonged and secondary fever in childhood bacterial meningitis. 259 1

Adrenocortical stress response in children with a variety of febrile illnesses was prospectively evaluated in 76 patients presenting to a general pediatric clinic with temperature greater than 101 degrees F (38.3 degrees C). Serum cortisol concentrations at presentation and again after recovery from infection were determined. Overall mean magnitude change in cortisol concentrations was 3.6-fold. Cortisol response was unrelated to the height of temperature but significant differences depending on clinical diagnosis were identified. The largest response (5-fold) was observed in patients with pneumonia, bacterial meningitis and fever of undetermined etiology. Current recommendations to double or triple replacement hydrocortisone dosage during times of increased stress in children with adrenal insufficiency are adequate only for simple febrile illnesses such as upper respiratory infection and streptococcal pharyngitis but could be subtherapeutic for infections such as pneumonia, meningitis and fever of undetermined origin, which imply a greater systemic involvement. It is possible, but untested, that a 4- to 5-fold increase in dosage would be more appropriate in those conditions.
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PMID:Serum cortisol responses in febrile children. 292 32

Neisseria sicca has been reported to cause bacterial meningitis, endocarditis, pneumonia, and spondylitis. Surgical drainage from a Bartholin's gland abscess contained N. sicca in pure culture. Neisseria species recovered from cerebrospinal fluid and gynecologic specimens must be carefully examined to avoid misidentification as meningococci or gonococci.
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PMID:Bartholin's gland abscess caused by Neisseria sicca. 317 Jul 16

Based on a review of medical records, we have analysed the outcome after bacterial meningitis among 875 patients admitted during the period 1966-1976. The outcome was evaluated not only by fatality during admission or within 4 weeks after discharge, but also by neurological sequelae at the time of discharge. These two types of outcome were determined and compared in subgroups of patients categorised according to a number of features of prognostic significance. This has allowed us to quantify the clinical conditions and features with regard to the severity of the prognosis. In most subgroups of patients, the frequencies of fatality and sequelae followed the same patterns: High frequencies were associated with pneumococcal meningitis, rare bacterial aetiologies, increasing age, affected consciousness on admission, pneumonia on admission, convulsions during admission, and respiratory problems during admission. For some prognostic features, a correlation could be established with high sequelae rates, but not with high fatality rates. This was the case with increased duration of disease symptoms before admission, with alcoholism and with previous head trauma. Thus, this correlation revealed the importance of early hospitalisation. We find that the analysis of sequelae not only supports, but also adds important prognostic information to the results obtained by an analysis of fatality itself in this large retrospective clinical study.
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PMID:Neurological sequelae and fatality as prognostic measures in 875 cases of bacterial meningitis. 334 49


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