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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fungal infections are increasing in frequency, especially among patients with haematological malignancies. The fungi which cause most of the infections in cancer patients are Candida spp. and Aspergillus spp. These fungi seldom infect individuals with normal host defence mechanisms. Many factors predispose patients to fungal infection, including neutropenia, lymphopenia, gastro-intestinal ulceration, intravenous catheters and adrenal corticosteroid therapy. Candida spp. cause 5 major types of infection: dermatitis, thrush, gastro-intestinal, primary organ and disseminated infection. Aspergillus spp. and Phycomycetes cause pulmonary, disseminated or rhino-cerebral infection. Cryptococcus neoformans usually causes meningitis but may cause
pneumonia
or disseminated infection. The diagnosis of fungal infection is often made only at postmortem examination, because it is difficult to isolate the aetiological agent from sites of infection.
Amphotericin B
remains the mainstay of antifungal therapy, but is seldom effective in the patient with compromised host defences. Successful management of these infections in the future will depend upon improvement in diagnostic capabilities as well as the introduction of more effective and less toxic antifungal agents.
...
PMID:Fungal infections in the cancer patient. 60 7
The diagnosis and successful control of systemic Aspergillus niger infection in 2 adult patients with acute leukemia is reported. During induction therapy, the first patient developed pulmonary infiltrates, skin lesions and abnormal liver function tests. Aspergillus niger was found on skin and liver biopsy. This patient was successfully treated with
Amphotericin B
and granulocyte transfusions and he remains in remission. The second patient developed a
pneumonitis
and adynamic ileus with positive sputum and stool cultures for Aspergillus niger. The infection only responded to
Amphotericin B
and granulocyte transfusions and the leukemia to cytoreductive chemotherapy. The patient later relapsed and died after a febrile illness. Fungi morpholocially consistent with Aspergillus were found in the liver at autopsy. Infection with A. niger is rare even in this patient population; however fungal infections have become an increasing problem. The need for a high index of suspicion, especially when an infection is unresponsive to antibacterial antibiotics, the various diagnostic tools, and the need for aggressive therapy are stressed.
Amphotericin B
is the chemotherapy of choice but may be insufficient in a severely neutropenic host where the simultaneous use of granulocyte transfusions might be lifesaving.
...
PMID:Successful control of systemic Aspergillus niger infections in two patients with acute leukemia. 106 May 8
Blastomycosis is a rare but important fungal infection that occurs primarily in the south central and midwestern United States. Epidemics of blastomycosis related to a point-source exposure include patients of all ages and both sexes; however, cases of endemic blastomycosis are usually in young to middle-aged adults and are reported more for men than for women.
Pneumonia
is the most common manifestation of blastomycosis, and the lungs are almost always the organ initially infected. Skin, bone, prostate, and central nervous system are the next most frequently infected organs in descending order.
Amphotericin B
is curative, but because of its toxic effects, oral agents have been investigated as therapy for blastomycosis. ketoconazole should replace amphotericin B as therapy for blastomycosis that is not life threatening. Itraconazole is an experimental agent that is perhaps even more effective than ketoconazole. The therapeutic usefulness of fluconazole for blastomycosis remains unproven. For patients with life-threatening or central nervous system blastomycosis, amphotericin B remains the treatment of choice.
...
PMID:Blastomycosis. 131 6
Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis is a necrotizing
pneumonia
that is most frequently seen in association with profound granulocytopenia as a consequence of cytotoxic chemotherapy that is used to treat hematologic neoplasms. There is considerable evidence that the incidence of this infection is increasing over the past decade as a result of improved medical support used in the management of "at risk" patients. Heightened clinical awareness coupled with advances in diagnostic techniques have led to earlier treatment and improved outcomes of this once uniformly fatal infection.
Amphotericin B
remains the treatment of choice; however, newer therapeutics (azoles) and strategies (combination chemotherapy, biological response modifiers) show promise as alternative regimens. Novel approaches in preventing the acquisition of pulmonary aspergillosis in the "at risk" patient are being explored.
...
PMID:Invasive pulmonary aspergillosis complicating neoplastic disease. 143 24
The in vitro and in vivo toxicities and activities of MS-8209, a new hydrosoluble amphotericin B (deoxycholate-amphotericin B [D-
AmB
];
Fungizone
) derivative, were studied. In vitro, MS-8209 was less toxic than
AmB
against renal tubular cells in primary culture and less active against Candida albicans and Cryptococcus neoformans. However, at 10-fold the
AmB
concentration, MS-8209 in vitro antifungal activity paralleled that of
AmB
. Fifty-percent lethal doses of MS-8209 and D-
AmB
in OF1 noninfected mice were 26 and 2.3 mg/kg, respectively. Therapeutic efficacy of MS-8209 was assessed in murine candidiasis, cryptococcosis, and aspergillosis. In each model of infection, we determined the maximum tolerated dosages of MS-8209 and D-
AmB
, i.e., the dosage inducing less than 15% mortality due to toxicity; the efficacies of MS-8209 and D-
AmB
at their respective maximum tolerated dosages were compared. In candidiasis, MS-8209 (15 mg/kg) significantly increased the survival time compared with D-
AmB
(0.5 mg/kg). Both compounds were equally effective at reducing CFU counts in the kidney. MS-8209 was the most effective agent for increasing the survival time in cryptococcal meningoencephalitis and for reducing CFU counts in spleen, brain, and lung during both cryptococcal
pneumonia
and meningoencephalitis. In aspergillosis, MS-8209 and D-
AmB
similarly prolonged the survival of treated mice compared with controls. These results show that when MS-8209 and D-
AmB
were used at the maximum tolerated dosage, MS-8209 was as effective as or more effective than D-
AmB
for the treatment of systemic mycoses. These findings warrant further experiments to study the pharmacokinetic properties and toxicity of MS-8209 under conditions of chronic administration.
...
PMID:Activity of MS-8209, a nonester amphotericin B derivative, in treatment of experimental systemic mycoses. 148 39
The epidemiological, clinical and therapeutical findings are described in a case of recurrent pulmonary histoplasmosis due to Histoplasma capsulatum. The patient, a bulldozer-operator, worked in Africa for a long period in extremely dusty conditions without any protection. Three different episodes of H. capsulatum
pneumonia
recurred during eighteen months after his return from Africa. A full dose treatment by
Amphotericin B
failed to eliminate disease recurrence on three occasions. The high concentration of airborne H. capsulatum spores inhaled could have been the main cause of the difficulty obtaining a rapid sterilization of the microorganism by
Amphotericin B
and disease recurrence. The late start of the treatment or the unexplained ability of some persons to develop repeated infections even with normal immunological parameters could be another explanation for the reported phenomenon.
...
PMID:Recurrent Histoplasma capsulatum pneumonia: a case report. 155 66
We report on a 8-month-old boy with AIDS, born of an asymptomatic mother with positive HTLV-III serology. He was hospitalized in the Intensive Care Unit because of anemia, fever and hepatosplenomegaly. Chest X-ray showed
pneumonia
and subsequent blood cultures were positive for Candida albicans. After 3 days of
Amphotericin B
treatment, the patient was transferred to Infectious Disease Department. After 30 days of hospitalization, the patient developed a rapid neurological impairment evolving into coma. CT scan showed a round, ring-shaped low density lesion with hyperdense and enhancing haemorrhagic centre in the left basal ganglia and a smaller hypodense lesion on the right. There was also evidence of cortical atrophy and mild ventricular dilatation. Such lesions are more commonly described in children with AIDS and congenital cytomegalic inclusion virus (CMV) encephalitis. In this case toxoplasma cysts were shown microscopically reinforcing the contention that in patients with AIDS, toxoplasma gondii infection may occur with atypical manifestation.
...
PMID:An unusual CT presentation of congenital cerebral toxoplasmosis in an 8 month-old boy with AIDS. 159 15
Fungal pneumonia is an infrequent but devastating complication of solid organ transplantation. The suspicion of fungal pulmonary infections caused by the dimorphic fungi is based on particular knowledge about the recipient's past or present residence in an endemic area. Some fungi, such as Cryptococcus neoformans, Candida sp and Mucor sp are associated with concomitant diabetes mellitus. The level of immunosuppressive therapy is also a major predisposing factor. For some fungi, such as Coccidioides immitis and C neoformans, serologic tests may assist in diagnosis. For aspergillus, Candida sp and Mucor sp culture evidence is not sufficient to determine pulmonary involvement since these fungi may be nonpathogenic saprophytes. Histopathologic proof is required. In patients with abnormal host defenses, treatment of fungal
pneumonia
is complex. In solid organ transplant recipients it is made more difficult by drug interactions with cyclosporine.
Amphotericin B
exhibits synergistic nephrotoxicity with cyclosporine and ketoconazole competes with cyclosporine for hepatic metabolism in an unpredictable manner that may result in increased cyclosporine toxicity.
...
PMID:Fungal pneumonia in transplant recipients. 218 21
Chemotherapy, while undeniably effective in controlling or eradicating a variety of neoplasms, is also accompanied by a number of toxicities. Foremost among these is neutropenia, which places the pediatric cancer patient at risk for serious fungal infections. The fungal organisms most commonly responsible for infection in neutropenic children are Candida, Aspergillus, Mucor, and the Phycomycetes. Common sites of infection include the oral cavity, sinuses, lung, and bloodstream. Recently, candidal infection of the liver was recognized as a growing problem. Diagnosis of deep-seated fungal infections, such as
pneumonia
and hepatic candidiasis, is extremely difficult, often requiring open-lung or liver biopsy, which a patient's hematologic status may not permit. Because early treatment significantly improves prognosis, empirical antifungal therapy may be indicated in selected patients.
Amphotericin B
is currently the antifungal agent of choice against most fungal organisms. Antifungal efficacy studies based on animal models of disseminated candidal infection suggest that amphotericin B combined with 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) is more effective than amphotericin B alone against most deep-seated Candida infections. The investigational drug, fluconazole, appears as effective as amphotericin B plus 5-FC in the prevention and early treatment of disseminated candidiasis, and clinical trials to assess this potentially important role for the new antifungal agent are now being initiated.
...
PMID:Fungal infections in the pediatric cancer patient. 219 45
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (brewer's or baker's yeast) is a common colonizer of human mucosal surfaces, but its role as a clinically important pathogen has been unclear. We report three cases of life-threatening invasive infection with S. cerevisiae resulting in
pneumonia
, liver abscess and sepsis, and disseminated infection with cardiac tamponade, respectively. A review of the English-language literature reveals 14 other cases of saccharomyces infection in humans. Severe immunosuppression, prolonged hospitalization, prior antibiotic therapy, and/or prosthetic cardiac valves are the settings where saccharomyces infection has been observed. Because Saccharomyces can be a common saprophytic contaminant, biopsy and pathologic confirmation of infection are often necessary for a definitive diagnosis.
Amphotericin B
is the treatment of choice for serious infections with this organism.
...
PMID:Invasive infection with Saccharomyces cerevisiae: report of three cases and review. 219 48
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