Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The aim of this study was to present neurological complications of influenza infections. Infections caused by influenza viruses can be very serious and may lead even to death resulted from the post-infectious complications. The most often occurring complications are pneumonia, bronchitis, bronchiolitis, myocarditis and otitis media. The other group is neurological post-influenza complications, including dementia, epileptic disorders, cerebrovascular disease, febrile convulsions, toxic encephalopathy, encephalitis, meningitis, subarachnoid hemorrhages, lethargic encephalitis, psychosis or increase in the number of cases of Parkinson's disease. The first way of prevention of influenza is vaccination that results in healthy, social and economic benefits.
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PMID:[Neurological complication of influenza infections]. 1219 26

Feto-maternal microchimerism suggests that immunologic tolerance exists between mother and fetus. Based on this hypothesis, we performed haploidentical stem cell transplantation (SCT) without T-cell depletion (TCD) in 5 patients with advanced hematologic malignancies. HLA incompatibilities for graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) direction included 3-loci mismatches in 4 patients, and 2-loci mismatches in one patient. Recipient chimeric cells were detected in all patients. The prophylaxis against GVHD was tacrolimus with minidose methotrexate. Engraftment was obtained in all patients. An acute GVHD of less than or equal to grade 2 developed in all patients except one who developed tacrolimus encephalopathy. Two patients died, 1 from fungal pneumonia and 1 from disease progression. The other 3 patients survived, with one patient in complete remission. These observations suggest that haploidentical SCT based on the feto-maternal microchimerism without TCD is possible.
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PMID:Non-T-cell-depleted HLA haploidentical stem cell transplantation in advanced hematologic malignancies based on the feto-maternal michrochimerism. 1248 Jun 95

Neurotoxicity is an unusual complication of cephalosporin therapy. Only few cases of neurotoxicity induced by Cefepime have been described and probably the frequency of Cefepime-induced status epilepticus is underestimated. We report a case of an 82 year-old male, ESRD patient on chronic hemodialysis program affected by pneumonia, who received a treatment with intravenous Cefepime (1 g/day) and developed a seizure 4 days after the starting antibiotic therapy. Cefepime-induced neurotoxicity was suspected and its administration was immediately discontinued. In order to increase Cefepime clearance a hemodialysis session was urgently started and an improvement of his conscious level was observed. On the following day, after a second hemodialysis session his clinical condition and the status of neurotoxicity were completely recovered. The patient was discharged from the hospital in stable clinical condition one week later. At variance with the cases previously reported, the daily dose of Cefepime administrated to our patient was 50% lower and respected drug prescription dosage. Thus, we speculate on the hypothesis that advanced age of our patient and metabolic encephalopathy induced by chronic uremia made him more sensitive to the neurotoxicity induced by the drug. In conclusion, our case suggests that, in very old patients on long-term hemodialysis, it should be considered, to avoid neurotoxicity, to monitor the clinical neurological status, to use Cefepime at lower dosage than that allowed in patients with severe renal impairment (1 g/day) and, when possible, to evaluate Cefepime plasma levels. However, in these patients, other agents of the same class should be considered such as Cefotaxime and Ceftriaxone which are characterized by both an hepatic and renal excretion. In alternative to cephalosporins, antibiotics with the same action spectrum in the absence of neurological toxicity (i.e. Meropenem) should be recommended.
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PMID:Neurotoxicity induced by Cefepime in a very old hemodialysis patient. 1277 3

Hemodialysis(HD) patients are at risk for thiamine deficiency because of low intake and accelerated loss of thiamine during HD. We report here an HD patient, an 82-year-old woman, who developed acute encephalopathy due to thiamine deficiency with hyperammonemia. She was admitted to Nishikawa Town Hospital due to pneumonia and was treated with ABPC/SBT for one week. While she was cured of pneumonia, she had a persistently poor appetite. On the twenty-fourth day after admission, HD with intradialytic parenteral nutrition(IDPN), which consisted of 10% glucose 500 ml, in order to correct her malnutrition, was started. She suddenly presented confusion, speech disturbance and ophthalmoplegia. HD with IDPN was stopped after two hours because of her symptoms. Laboratory studies disclosed plasma glucose of 186 mg/dl and serum ammonium of 155 micrograms/dl. Arterial blood gas analysis(inhaling 3 l/min O2) showed severe metabolic acidosis and respiratory acidosis (pH 7.138, pCO2 44.8 mmHg, pO2 108.9 mmHg, HCO3- 15.1 mmol/l). Her malnutrition, unexplained metabolic acidosis and neurological presentation raised the suspicion of acute encephalopathy due to thiamine deficiency. Fursultiamine 100 mg was administered intravenously. After two hours, metabolic acidosis disappeared (pH 7.437, pCO2 33.9 mmHg, pO2 161.0 mmHg, HCO3- 22.9 mmol/l), and she regained her clear consciousness and serum ammonium decreased at 16 micrograms/dl on the next morning. Serum lactate and thiamine level were shown later to be 57.5 mg/dl and 27 nmol/l, respectively. Her clinical course suggests that the glucose load including IDPN may have caused deterioration of the neurological disorder under the condition of thiamine deficiency. Furthermore, it is possible that a relationship exists between thiamine deficiency and hyperammonemia.
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PMID:[Acute encephalopathy due to thiamine deficiency with hyperammonemia in a chronic hemodialysis patient: a case report]. 1280 78

A 15-year-old girl developed a severe Staphylococcus aureus pneumonia following an influenza virus infection. The patient was admitted to a paediatric intensive-care facility because of respiratory and circulatory failure. Despite aggressive therapy, she died on the third day following admission to the intensive care unit due to secondary hypoxic-ischaemic encephalopathy. Blood and respiratory aspirate cultures showed community-acquired methicillin-resistant S. aureus (CA-MRSA) with a normal antibiotic sensitivity except for betalactam antibiotics. PCR-based methods demonstrated that the isolate possessed the Panton-Valentine-leukocidin (PVL) gene, encoding an S. aureus exotoxin that is associated with fulminant necrotising pneumonia. This case shows that clinicians in the Netherlands should also be aware of the possibility of CA-MRSA in patients without risk factors for MRSA carriage. Especially in children and adolescents with an influenza virus infection, pneumonia due to PVL-positive S. aureus strains may be life-threatening.
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PMID:[Fatal pneumonia in an adolescent due to community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus positive for Panton-Valentine-leukocidin]. 1281 14

We report a case of a 40-year-old man presenting with relapsing encephalopathy 4 years post-intestinal transplantation. Each episode was preceded by symptoms suggestive of subacute intestinal obstruction, marked dehydration, and, on one occasion, grade 4 encephalopathy. Physical examination revealed hypertonia, clonus, and hyperreflexia. Biochemistry was consistent with renal impairment, metabolic alkalosis, hyperammonaemia, and normal liver function. Plain radiographs and abdominal computed tomography revealed dilated proximal small bowel loops, and barium radiography demonstrated a strictured distal anastomosis. Hydrogen breath testing indicated bacterial overgrowth. Following rehydration and antibiotic therapy, the patient recovered fully between episodes. Further episodes of encephalopathy did not recur following resection of the distal anastomotic stricture and resolution of bacterial overgrowth. Unfortunately, one year later the patient died of pneumonia. To the best of our knowledge, encephalopathy secondary to intestinal transplant related porto-caval shunt and bacterial overgrowth in strictured bowel has not been previously reported but might have implications for the management of future patients.
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PMID:Relapsing encephalopathy following small bowel transplantation. 1282 21

From September 1997 to March 2002, a total of 84 children were admitted to Chang Gung Children's Hospital due to influenza A virus infection. Influenza A virus infection was documented in 61 cases by viral isolation from throat and in 23 cases by serologic studies. The mean age of patients was 43.8 months, ranging from 20 days to 16 years. Forty-one (49%) patients were male. Lower respiratory tract infection (53 of 84 cases) was the most common clinical manifestation, occurring predominantly in children younger than 5 years (49 of 53 cases). The types of lower respiratory tract infection included bronchiolitis/bronchopneumonia in 33 cases, pneumonia in 17, and croup in 3. Central nervous system dysfunction was noted in 26 patients, predominantly in older children (18 of 26 cases). This included encephalopathy in 11 cases, encephalitis in 10, aseptic meningitis in 2, psychosis in 1, febrile convulsions in 1, and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis in 1. Gastrointestinal symptoms were mild in most patients. Diarrhea occurred in 18.4% of the children younger than 5 years, compared with only 8.4% of the older children. By contrast, abdominal pain was more common in older children (16.7%) than in younger children (6.7%). Ten children had leukocytosis (white blood cell > or = 15000 /microL) and 9 of them were younger than 5 years. Eleven children had a C-reactive protein level greater than 100 mg/L and 10 of them were younger than 5 years. The mean duration of fever and hospitalization were 4.6 +/- 2.8 days and 7.4 +/- 5.7 days, respectively. The clinical outcomes were excellent in all but 1 patient who died from intractable pulmonary hemorrhage. The frequency and duration of hospitalization due to influenza A virus is much greater than generally thought in Taiwan, suggesting an urgent need for educational programs to increase awareness of the characteristics and risks for this illness.
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PMID:Clinical characteristics of children with influenza A virus infection requiring hospitalization. 1288 62

A previously neurodevelopmentally intact 5-year-old male was admitted to hospital with a right lower lobe pneumonia with pleural effusion, subsequently confirmed to be a Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection. On the seventh day of the illness he had a prolonged generalized tonic or tonic-clonic convulsion, requiring intubation and ventilation. He was slow to regain consciousness (Child's Glasgow Coma Score 7-10 over 6 days) and brain imaging with CT and then MRI demonstrated bilateral thalamic lesions with oedema and central haemorrhage suggestive of acute bilateral thalamic necrosis, without striatal or white-matter involvement. He was treated with a 2-week course of erythromycin, and as an autoimmune process was considered possible, 5 days of intravenous methylprednisolone (20 mg/kg/day) followed by a 4-week oral prednisolone taper. He made a slow recovery over the next few weeks with almost complete neurological recovery by 2 months but with significant dysarthria, drooling, and a mild left hemiparesis. At 9 months, significant dystonia continued to affect his speech and, together with tremor, his upper-limb fine motor function bilaterally. His gait, personality, and higher cognitive functions appeared to have recovered fully. Although acute striatal necrosis, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, and encephalitis have been reported with Mycoplasma pneumoniae and a similar picture of acute bilateral thalamic necrosis with influenza-A ('acute necrotizing encephalopathy'), this is the first reported case of Mycoplasma pneumoniae-associated isolated acute bilateral thalamic necrosis.
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PMID:Acute bilateral thalamic necrosis in a child with Mycoplasma pneumoniae. 1499 91

Viral isolation is the conventional method for influenza virus diagnosis but it is less useful for immediate patient management. RT-PCR is the sensitive and rapid assay for the detection of respiratory viruses. Single step and multiplex RT-PCR is able to detect several viruses simultaneously in a single reaction. Real time PCR(TaqMan method) is able to detect the amplicon directly by release of a fluorescent reporter of the probe during the amplification reactions. This procedure can save time since it eliminates post-PCR processing steps. These RT-PCR methods should be useful for the accurate and rapid diagnosis of influenza virus infection, especially severe cases such as pneumonia and encephalopathy.
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PMID:[Detection of influenza virus (RT-PCR assay and others)]. 1461 30

A 2-year-old boy with severe multiorgan disease (i.e., otitis, enteritis, bilateral pneumonia, encephalopathy, myocarditis, rash) was diagnosed with adenovirus-associated macrophage activation syndrome according to clinical and laboratory parameters (fever, hepatosplenomegaly, bicytopenia, hyperferritinemia, hypertriglyceridemia). He had no unusual history of earlier infections or a family history of hemophagocytic syndrome or immune defects. Intravenous immunoglobulin was administered to prevent exacerbation of the suspected incipient hemophagocytic syndrome. Clarithromycin, a macrolide with immunomodulatory effect, was included in the antibiotic regimen of the progressive pneumonia, followed by rapid amelioration and remission of clinical and laboratory findings. Causal links between treatment and clinical improvement are discussed and a brief review of the recent literature is included.
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PMID:IVIG treatment of adenovirus infection-associated macrophage activation syndrome in a two-year-old boy: case report and review of the literature. 1463 18


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