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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical and radiological characteristics of 217 consecutive episodes of gram-negative bacillary
pneumonia
occurring in 189 adult cancer patients between November 1968 and December 1974 were analyzed. The majority of patients had acute leukemia (54%). Fever larger than or equal to 101 degrees F was the single most common symptom and sign of the presence of infection (90%). Next in frequency were crepitant rales (65%), cough (41%), dyspnea (19%) and chest pain (18%). Radiographic evidence of
pneumonia
was found in 83% of cases and it consisted mainly of alveolar infiltrates involving both lung fields and predominantly the bases. Up to one-third of the patients had normal chestx-ray examinations at the onset of infection, though they subsequently became abnormal in 42% of them. The majority of patients (81%) whose initial chest x-rays did not reveal the presence of
pneumonia
were neutropenic (less than 1000 circumlating neutrophils/mm3). Klebsiella sp. and Pseudomonas sp. were the most common infecting organisms. The overall cure rate was 61%; 70% for Klebsiella sp. infections and 64% for Pseudomonas sp. infections. Pulmonary abscesses occurred in 14% of the cases. Cures were related to the antibiotic sensitivity of the infecting organisms and to the number of circulating neutrophils during the period of infection.
Best
results were obtained with the administration of gentamicin, the newer aminoglycoside antibiotic sisomicin, tobramycin and amikacin, or the combination of gentamicin with carbenicillin or with cephalosporins. Early and vigorous therapy of gram-negative bacillary
pneumonia
with appropriate antibiotics has improved the prognosis of this infection at our institution.
...
PMID:Gram-negative bacillary pneumonia in the compromised host. 32 40
Amikacin, a new aminoglycoside antibiotic, was utilized in the treatment of 49 cases of infection which occurred in 39 neutropenic cancer patients. Thirty-four patients (69 per cent) responded to this antibiotic.
Pneumonia
and septicemia were the most common types of infection treated and the response rates were 65 per cent and 75 per cent, respectively. Gram-negative bacili were responsible for 93 per cent of the identified infections and 74 per cent responded. E. coli, Ps. aeruginosa, and organisms of the Klebsiella-Enterobacter-Serratia group were the most common gram-negative bacilli causing infection. Responses were more frequent among patients who maintained higher serum concentrations of antibiotic, but the differences were not statistically significant. Patients with severe neutropenia (less than 100 neutrophils/mm3) had a response rate of 68 per cent. Toxicity was manifested as azotemia and hearing loss which occurred in 13 per cent and 6 per cent, respectively. However, toxicity was directly related to serum concentration and to the number of treatments with amikacin. This antibiotic is of potential importance because of its efficacy against gram-negative bacilli infections.
Best
results were obtained when sufficient drug was given as a continuous intravenous infusion to maintain serum concentrations of about 15 mu g/ml.
...
PMID:Amikacin therapy of infections in neutropenic patients. 110 49
This study was initiated to determine the rate and characteristics of 99mTc-DTPA clearance from the whole lung in a group of 9 sheep. Submicronic aerosol droplets were delivered to unsedated sheep held in a sling-like frame.
Best
fits for clearance curves to single- and biexponentials were calculated. The monoexponential T50 for the aerosol clearance was 293 min +/- 74 SD. Background correction was found to have a minimal effect (approx. 10%). Biexponential fitting only marginally improved correlations in the 8 healthy sheep, but in one additional animal with clinical evidence of
pneumonia
, clearance was faster and biexponential fitting was substantially better. These clearance values in conscious sheep are longer than previous findings with 99mTc-DTPA in anesthetized sheep. There appears to be a wide variation of radioaerosol 99mTc-DTPA lung clearances among different species, sheep exhibiting a comparatively prolonged clearance profile.
...
PMID:Lung clearance of 99mTc-DTPA aerosol in conscious sheep. 304 5
The increasing challenge posed by multiresistant saprophytes in medical microbiology is strikingly demonstrated by the emergence of Burkholderia (formerly Pseudomonas) cepacia as an opportunist pathogen in immunocompromised patients, particularly individuals with chronic granulomatous disease and cystic fibrosis (CF).
Best
known previously as a phytopathogen and the cause of soft rot of onions, B. cepacia presents three major problems for the CF community: innate multiresistance to antimicrobial agents; person-to-person transmission of epidemic strains through nosocomial or social contacts; and 'cepacia syndrome', a fulminating fatal
pneumonia
, sometimes associated with septicaemia, that occurs in approximately 20% of colonised patients, including those with previously mild disease. Accumulated evidence to dispel earlier suggestions that the organism is avirulent and merely a marker of existing lung disease includes: case-controlled studies in CF patients; reports of serious infections in non-CF patients; in-vitro and in-vivo evidence that B. cepacia induces production of pro-inflammatory markers, including the major cytokine TNFalpha; and histopathological evidence that exposure of transgenic CF mice to B. cepacia results in
pneumonia
. By the early 1990s, the use of selective culture media and DNA-based bacterial fingerprinting confirmed suspicions of epidemic person-to-person spread of B. cepacia. This evidence provided scientific justification for draconian and controversial measures for infection control, in particular, segregation of B. cepacia-colonised patients during treatment at CF centres and their exclusion from social gatherings and national conferences. Recently, molecular analyses of type strains and clinical isolates have revealed that isolates identified previously as B. cepacia belong to at least three distinct species and have increased concern regarding the reliability of current laboratory detection and identification systems. Clarification of the taxonomy of B. cepacia-like organisms and the pathogenic potential of environmental isolates remains a high priority, particularly when the organism's antifungal and degradative properties have created interest in its potential use as a biological control agent to improve crop yields and its use for the bioremediation of contaminated soils.
...
PMID:Burkholderia cepacia: medical, taxonomic and ecological issues. 895 42
Expert and aggressive pre-operative preparation of the woman with severe pre-eclampsia will ultimately determine her intraoperative outcome. Such considerations as the effect of endotracheal manipulation on intracranial pressure, of thrombocytopenia on the potential to produce a compressive epidural haematoma following epidural or combined spinal-epidural neuraxial block and of adequacy of invasive monitoring for Caesarean section loom large in the eyes of an anaesthetist preparing such a patient for surgery. Time spent pre-operatively in fluid volume optimization, in assessment of ventricular function, filling pressures and systemic vascular resistance, on aspiration
pneumonitis
and seizure prophylaxis, on control of hypertension, on correction of coagulopathy and on attenuation of pressor responses is time well spent and will have profound effects on the peri-operative course. The choice of agents and techniques for control of hypertension and reduction of vascular resistance, for induction and maintenance of general anaesthesia, for eclampsia prophylaxis and for regional anaesthesia or analgesia for operative or spontaneous delivery is, likewise, important and, at times, problematic.
Baillieres
Best
Pract Res Clin Obstet Gynaecol 1999 Mar
PMID:Clinical management of established pre-eclampsia and gestational hypertension: an anaesthetist's perspective. 1074 95
Bleeding from stress-induced mucosal lesions continues to be a potential problem in critically ill patients, although its incidence has decreased dramatically over the past decade. Patients considered to be at risk are those with respiratory failure, coagulopathy, severe burns or tetraplegia. The most important cause of stress ulcer bleeding is tissue hypoxia. Provided that appropriate dosage regimens are administered, all agents approved for stress ulcer prophylaxis may reduce the incidence of overt as well as clinically important bleeding. However, the efficacy of stress ulcer prophylaxis does not correlate with the efficacy of gastric acid inhibition. Although numerous studies have demonstrated that an alkaline gastric juice is associated with gastric Gram-negative bacterial overgrowth, controversy remains over whether the pharmacological suppression of gastric acid in critically ill patients facilitates nosocomial
pneumonia
. The reasons for these divergent results are discussed, as is a possible association between gastric acid suppression and other systemic infections. Finally, several cost-effectiveness analyses performed over recent years have demonstrated that, in properly selected critically ill patients, stress ulcer prophylaxis is cost-effective.
Best
Pract Res Clin Gastroenterol 2001 Jun
PMID:Role of acid suppressants in intensive care medicine. 1140 38
Respiratory illnesses are the commonest cause of patient visits to physicians. Although the common cold, sinusitis and bronchitis may be lacking in drama, they account for a substantial amount of morbidity among women of reproductive age and are frequently encountered by physicians caring for pregnant women. Present knowledge about the management of these common conditions and the safety of the medications often used to treat them are reviewed in this chapter. Asthma and community-acquired
pneumonia
are more serious respiratory illnesses that are also often encountered in pregnancy. Present evidence suggests that community-acquired
pneumonia
is best treated empirically, with additional investigation usually necessary only if there is a failure of initial treatment. The recognition of asthma as an inflammatory condition has led to a very specific approach to its management that can readily and safely be applied to the pregnant woman. Treatment of HIV and tuberculosis should not be withheld during pregnancy because of the life-threatening nature of these infections and the importance of preventing vertical transmission.
Best
Pract Res Clin Obstet Gynaecol 2001 Dec
PMID:Drugs in pregnancy. Respiratory disease. 1180 May 33
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a connective tissue disease characterized by the formation of autoantibodies and immune complexes. The heart and lungs are among the organ systems commonly affected in SLE. Pericarditis, premature coronary atherosclerosis, pleuritis and pulmonary infections are the most prevalent cardiopulmonary manifestations. Other rare associations include myocarditis, coronary arteritis, acute lupus
pneumonitis
/pulmonary haemorrhage, acute reversible hypoxaemia and 'shrinking lung' syndrome. Current imaging modalities may provide earlier detection of subclinical disease, which may aid in preventing these potentially fatal complications. The response to treatment varies, depending on the presentation of disease. In this chapter we address the frequency, diagnosis and monitoring, and treatment regimens of cardiac and pulmonary involvement in patients with SLE.
Best
Pract Res Clin Rheumatol 2002 Apr
PMID:How to manage patients with cardiopulmonary disease? 1204 50
The famous nineteenth century American physician and medical educator, Austin Flint, Sr., was a professor at the New Orleans School of Medicine and a visiting physician at Charity Hospital in New Orleans from 1858 to 1861.
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remembered for the heart murmur that bears his name, Flint was also responsible for advances in the diagnosis and treatment of infectious diseases in the era that preceded the germ theory and the discovery of antibiotics. His experiences at Charity Hospital and his exposure to the French style of medicine as practiced by the Creole physicians of New Orleans encouraged him to advocate conservative treatment for
pneumonia
, in contrast to the bloodletting and other heroic measures that were popular at the time. His recommendations, based on statistical analysis of his clinical data from Charity Hospital, were one of the earliest examples of evidence-based medicine in America.
...
PMID:Austin Flint in New Orleans and the origins of evidence-based medicine. 1213 60
This chapter deals with genital chlamydial infections in pregnancy and postpartum. There is increasing evidence that Chlamydia trachomatis infection may result in a number of adverse pregnancy outcomes, including early and late abortion, intrauterine infections of the fetus, stillbirth, prematurity, premature rupture of the membranes (PROM) and postpartum endometritis. Ectopic pregnancy is commonly associated with a previous tubal chlamydial infection where immunological reactions seem to play a role. C. trachomatis infection may be acquired as an intrauterine infection, as well as during transit through the birth channel, and this may result in neonatal conjunctivitis and/or
pneumonia
. The role of chlamydial infection in the sudden death syndrome has also been considered, but evidence so far is minimal. Neonatal chlamydial infection may cause life-long sequelae, such as obstructive lung disease. Genital chlamydial infections have been associated with problems in insemination and attempts at in vitro fertilization. The chapter also deals with screening of pregnant women for C. trachomatis and the treatment of infected mothers and their offspring.
Best
Pract Res Clin Obstet Gynaecol 2002 Dec
PMID:Influence of infection with Chlamydia trachomatis on pregnancy outcome, infant health and life-long sequelae in infected offspring. 1247 86
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