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)

Significant streptococcal (non-pneumococcal, non-enterococcal) bacteraemia was detected in 100 patients in two Health Districts of North Yorkshire in the decade 1978-1988. Patients with these infections accounted for 11% of the total 902 patients in the districts in whom bacteraemia was diagnosed during the period. Infection was most often seen with beta-haemolytic streptococci (52 patients) comprising Lancefield group A (Streptococcus pyogenes) (20 patients), group B (13), group C (5), group G (9), haemolytic Streptococcus milleri and non-groupable streptococci (5). The wide variety of serious infections included cellulitis, abscess, septicaemia, pneumonia, septic arthritis, necrotising fasciitis, acute endocarditis and mycotic aneurysm. Of these 52 patients, 21 (40%) died. alpha-Haemolytic streptococcal bacteraemia was diagnosed in 38 patients of whom 24 (63%) suffered from endocarditis and three (8%) died. Three of ten patients with non-haemolytic or anaerobic streptococcal bacteraemia died also. Six of the 100 patients with streptococcal bacteraemia had concomitant acute virus infections. Of the total 56 patients with infective endocarditis diagnosed in the districts during the period, streptococci were responsible in 30 (54%) of them. The predisposing factors, clinical features and outcome of the infections are described and discussed.
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PMID:Invasive streptococcal infections in the era before the acquired immune deficiency syndrome: a 10 years' compilation of patients with streptococcal bacteraemia in North Yorkshire. 266 96

A collection of 308 clinical isolates of beta-haemolytic Lancefield group C streptococci was assembled from laboratories in England, Nigeria and New Zealand. Of these, 276 isolates were Streptococcus equisimilis, 23 S. milleri and nine S. zooepidemicus. Isolates of S. equisimilis in the African collection, though few, gave higher rates of lactose and raffinose fermentation, aesculin hydrolysis and positive alpha-galactosidase reactions than those from elsewhere. Erythromycin resistance was found in 1.9% of the English isolates of S. equisimilis. Strains from superficial infections accounted for 88% of the collection and were most commonly isolated from the upper respiratory tract, skin or wounds. Amongst the 36 patients yielding isolates from deep sites S. equisimilis was found in septicaemia, cellulitis, abscess, peritonitis, septic arthritis, pneumonia, mycotic aneurysm and acute epiglottitis, S. milleri was found in abdominal abscesses, peritonitis, pleural empyema and osteomyelitis and S. zooepidemicus was found in septicaemia, pneumonia, meningitis and septic arthritis. Within the collection an unselected general catchment of 214 isolates of group C streptococci from the laboratories in Yorkshire showed the following species: from 199 superficial infections 94% S. equisimilis, 5% S. milleri and 1% S. zooepidemicus and 15 patients with deeper, more aggressive infections 67, 27 and 6.7% of these species respectively.
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PMID:Group C streptococci in human infection: a study of 308 isolates with clinical correlations. 273 52

For one year all narcotic addicts admitted to the Detroit Medical Center with infectious endocarditis (74 cases) were compared with a control group of bacteremic addicts who had other infections (106 cases). Endocarditis was caused by Staphylococcus aureus (60.8% of cases), streptococci (16.2%), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (13.5%), mixed bacteria (8.1%), and Corynebacterium JK (1.4%). S. aureus endocarditis most frequently involved the tricuspid valve; streptococci infected left-sided valves significantly more often than other organisms (P = .001). Biventricular and multiple-valve infections were commonest in patients with pseudomonas endocarditis (P = .05). Two-dimensional echocardiography, when combined with an abnormal chest roentgenogram, was highly predictive of endocarditis. Bacteremia in the absence of endocarditis was associated with primary skin and soft tissue infection, mycotic aneurysm at the site of narcotic injection, septic arthritis, septic thrombophlebitis, pneumonia, osteomyelitis, mediastinal abscess, and unclassified infection. Polymicrobial bacteremia in the nonendocarditis group was associated with markedly increased morbidity. Mild hyponatremia occurred in 41% of all patients and was also associated with significantly increased morbidity. Analysis of the two groups disclosed similarities and differences with implications for the pathophysiology and treatment of addicts with bacteremic infection.
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PMID:Bacteremia in narcotic addicts at the Detroit Medical Center. II. Infectious endocarditis: a prospective comparative study. 375 55

Two cases of pulmonary artery aneurysm are reported in patients with persistent ductus arteriosus (PDA). The first was a mycotic aneurysm complicating staphylococcal pneumonia; the other was a calcific aneurysm of the right pulmonary artery. The mycotic origin was confirmed in the first case. The aetiological roles of pulmonary hypertension and previous endocarditis are discussed in the second case. Based on these two observations, the authors analyse the aetiology and evolution of mycotic aneurysms and review the therapeutic problems posed by their association with PDA.
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PMID:[Pulmonary artery aneurysms in patent ductus arteriosus]. 393 46

A patient presented to the hospital with mild hemoptysis of 1 day's duration and an infiltrate on chest roentgenogram. Shortly after admission, she developed shock, massive hemoptysis, and a bloody pleural effusion that yielded Streptococcus viridans. Pulmonary arteriography revealed a peripheral pulmonary artery aneurysm, which was embolized with a detachable silicone balloon, resulting in immediate cessation of hemoptysis. An acute pneumonia associated with moderate to massive hemoptysis raises the possibility of mycotic aneurysm; pulmonary arteriography is indicated, which allows for diagnosis and treatment during the same study. Successful embolization may obviate the need for surgery or convert an emergency thoracotomy to an elective procedure.
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PMID:Balloon embolization of a mycotic pulmonary artery aneurysm. 689 2

We reviewed the records of 96 children hospitalized with varicella from July 1, 1975 to June 30, 1980. Eighty-one were immunologically normal and 15 were immunocompromised on the basis of neoplasia, immunosuppressive therapy, or genetic disease. These children experienced 106 complications including viral dissemination-encephalitis (44), bacterial infection (25), Reye's syndrome (17), unusual cutaneous lesions (eight), drug overdose (five), diabetic ketoacidosis (two), neonatal infection (two), dehydration (two), and exacerbation of preexisting nephrosis (one). The length of hospitalization varied from one to 38 days with a median of five days. There were ten varicella pneumonia (one), of neonatal varicella (one), and of a ruptured mycotic aneurysm secondary to septicemia (one). This review demonstrates (1) a substantial occurrence of life-threatening complications of varicella in childhood, and (2) a need for prospective epidemiologic data on the incidence of complications to determine the scope and extent of varicella vaccination.
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PMID:Life-threatening complications of varicella. 729 88

A cross-sectional study of a cohort of 49 male human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected intravenous drug users attending the Infectious Diseases Unit of the National University of Malaysia during 1991-94 yielded a clinical profile of these patients. The mean age of respondents was 33.2 years and the mean duration of intravenous drug use was 12.7 years. On average, these men had known of their HIV-positivity for 53.2 weeks. Intravenous drug use was the only reported HIV risk factor in 34 men (69%). Clinical symptoms at intake included fatigue (49%), weight loss (47%), night sweats (31%), fever (14%), and diarrhea (6%), while clinical findings included hepatomegaly (57%), lymphadenopathy (35%), and oral thrush (29%). Anemia (82%), leucocytosis (53%), hypoalbuminemia (43%), hyperglobulinemia (88%), elevated liver enzymes and hyponatremia (57%) were frequent laboratory findings. The prevalences of hepatitis B virus, cytomegalovirus, and toxoplasma infection were 12.1%, 72.7%, and 59%, respectively. A total of 91 diagnoses were made in these 49 patients: most common were pneumonia, tuberculosis, bacteremia, infective endocardiditis, mycotic aneurysm, and psychiatric disorders. The mean duration of known progression to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) in the 7 patients at this stage was 391 days. Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia was the most common AIDS-defining illness. Three months into the study, 19 men (57%) had defaulted, reflecting the difficulties of involving drug addicts in research and intervention projects. Moreover, 16 patients (33%) were first confirmed HIV-positive at presentation to the hospital, suggesting that many drug users' HIV status remains unknown until they develop symptoms requiring hospital care.
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PMID:A study of Malaysian drug addicts with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 906 11

A 61-year-old female complaining of arthralgia was repeatedly treated with antibiotics and also with prednisolone. A chronic polyarthritis was assumed. In hospital, leukocytosis of 21.000 was found one day before death as well as moderate anemia. Colonoscopy was rejected by the patient. A computer tomography revealed destructive arthritis of the symphysis, vertebral osteochondrosis L5/S1, and sigmoid diverticulosis. The patient died with clinical signs of central dysregulation. At autopsy, a covered perforation of a sigmoid diverticulum with purulent peridiverticulitis was found. The 5th lumbal vertebra and the symphysis showed hematogenic abscesses. Microabscedating pneumonia, purulent meningitis and hypophysitis, and mycotic aneurysm of the basilar artery with lethal rupture were further results of hematogenic spread. Death was caused by massive subarachnoidal hemorrhage. This history is not untypical for elder patients with complicated diverticular disease. The intestinal perforation is often clinically occult due to only few and unspecific symptoms which cannot be exactly attributed to the colon. In the last ten years, we have found lethal complications of sigmoid diverticulitis at a frequency of 0.32% (5 cases in 1.557 subsequent autopsies). The clinical differential diagnosis included diverticulitis in none of the cases. This underlines the importance of autopsies for quality control in medicine, because modern diagnostic methods such as computer tomography were not able to give the correct diagnosis in these cases.
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PMID:Lethal complications in a case of sigmoid diverticulitis. A case report. 906 89

Although pulmonary artery aneurysms are a rare vascular anomaly, they are seen in a wide variety of conditions, such as congenital heart disease, infection, trauma, pulmonary hypertension, cystic medial necrosis and generalized vasculitis. To our knowledge, mycotic aneurysms caused by pulmonary actinomycosis have not been reported in the radiologic literature. Herein, a case of pulmonary actinomycosis complicated by mycotic aneurysm is presented. On CT scans, this case showed focal aneurysmal dilatation of a peripheral pulmonary artery within necrotizing pneumonia of the right lower lobe, which was successfully treated with transcatheter embolization using wire coils.
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PMID:Mycotic pulmonary artery aneurysm as an unusual complication of thoracic actinomycosis. 1506 61

A 68-year-old diabetic woman suffered from mycotic aneurysm due to Klebsiella pneumoniae over her abdominal aorta; she received surgical intervention, followed by treatment with first-generation cephalosporins for 6 months. She was hospitalized again 11 months later because of another episode of mycotic aneurysm caused by K. pneumoniae on her thoracic aorta. Fingerprinting generated by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and infrequent-restriction-site polymerase indicated K. pneumoniae isolates of the identical clonal strain were responsible for these two mycotic-aneurysm episodes. Unfortunately, nosocomial pneumonia developed at the second hospitalization; blood and purposefully sampled feces specimen cultures both grew CTX-M-24-producing K. pneumoniae, which were of the same strain and genetically nonrelated to the K. pneumoniae strain causing mycotic aneurysms earlier. This is the first report on infection due to CTX-M-24-producing K. pneumoniae. It is unclear whether the prolonged use of first-generation cephalosporins in this case selected a strain of enteric organism possessing the ESBL in question, which was capable of passing this ESBL plasmid to the K. pneumoniae strain causing the nosocomial infection. This report suggests that further observation is needed before one can draw a conclusion on the possibility of the selection of ESBL enteric organism by extensive exposure to first-generation cephalosporins.
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PMID:Recurrent Klebsiella pneumoniae mycotic aneurysm in a diabetic patient and emergence of an extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (CTX-M-24)-containing Klebsiella pneumoniae strain after prolonged treatment with first-generation cephalosporins for mycotic aneurysm. 1565 Mar 83


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