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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
OBJECTIVE: To review epidemiological, laboratorial and clinical aspects of the penicillin-resistant pneumococcus, and to consider the impact of the rapidly increasing drug-resistance on the management of the main infections caused by these pathogens. METHODS: Bibliographic review covering the last ten years, using both Medline system and direct research. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: The Streptococcus pneumoniae is an important agent in acute otitis media,
pneumonia
and meningitis in children. The clinical evaluation of the pneumococcal infections depends on the age and health condition of the patient, site and severity of the infection and the adequacy of the treatment.
Penicillin
was uniformly effective against pneumococcus until three decades ago, when the first reports of clinical resistance were published. Since then, there has been a rapidly increasing in the level and rates of resistance to penicillin, which parallels to others beta lactams and antimicrobials. This paper includes a suscint review of the genetic and phenotypic mechanisms of the resistance to penicillin, the available bacteriologic tests for determination of in vitro susceptibility to antimicrobials and finally the importance of the pneumococcus in acute otitis media,
pneumonia
/bacteremia and meningitis. There has been new empirical therapeutic regimens recommended for meningitis, according to the community rates and levels of resistance to beta lactams and to the presence of certain underlying conditions among the patients, such as immunedepressant diseases and frequent antibiotic consumption. The rapidly increasing prevalence of drug-resistant strains emphasizes the importance of judicious antibiotic use and the development of a conjugate vaccine, effective to prevent invasive infections and to reduce the rate of carriage of the pneumococcus, even among infants.
...
PMID:[Penicillin-resistant pneumococcus: practical implications] 1468 86
Penicillin
, the drug of choice in tetanus, may potentiate the effect of tetanus toxin by inhibiting the type-A (GABAA) receptor for gamma-amino-n-butyric acid. Metronidazole has therefore been suggested as an alternative. Intramuscular benzathine penicillin (1.2 million units as a single dose; N=56), enteral metronidazole (600 mg every 6 h for 10 days; N=55) and intravenous benzyl penicillin (2 million units every 4 h for 10 days; N=50) were therefore compared, in a randomized, controlled trial, among patients with all grades of tetanus. On presentation, the three treatment groups were similar in terms of age and sex distributions, immune statuses, durations of illness, and their APACHE-II scores and Ablett's grades of tetanus. Of the patients given benzathine penicillin, 36 required tracheostomy, 10 neuromuscular blockade, and 23 mechanical ventilation; the corresponding numbers for the metronidazole (34, 12 and 18, respectively) and benzyl-penicillin groups (39, 12 and 25, respectively) were similar (P>0.10). The incidences of dysautonomia and nosocomial
pneumonia
and the numbers of in-hospital deaths (26 with benzathine penicillin, 19 with metronidazole and 22 with benzyl penicillin; P=0.392) were also similar in each treatment arm. The length of the hospital stay was longer in the patients receiving benzyl penicillin than in the benzathine-penicillin or metronidazole groups, with means (S.D.) of 21.9 (15), 16.9 (11) and 19.9 (15) days, respectively, but the difference was not statistically significant (P=0.09). Although the three antibiotic regimens investigated appear equally effective, benzathine penicillin offers the convenience of a single, intramuscular injection instead of the 10 days of therapy needed with the other two drugs.
...
PMID:Benzathine penicillin, metronidazole and benzyl penicillin in the treatment of tetanus: a randomized, controlled trial. 1500 Jul 32
Clarithromycin (CAM) is a new macrolide antibiotic which is active against a wide range of organisms responsible for community-acquired
pneumonia
(CAP) and has superior pharmacokinetics and tolerance compared to erythromycin. In this study, we evaluated the clinical efficacy and antimicrobial activity of CAM in the empirical treatment of patients with CAP. CAM (200 mg given twice daily for 2 weeks) was orally administered to 26 patients with mild or moderate suspected atypical pneumonia, including 15 patients in whom treatment with beta-lactam antibiotics was largely ineffective. Causative pathogens were identified on the basis of quantitative sputum cultures, blood cultures, and routine serological testings; M. pneumoniae was most commonly observed in patients with CAP (38.5%; 10/26), followed by H. influenzae (11.5%; 3/26), C. pneumoniae (3.8%; 1/26), and S. constellatus (3.8%; 1/26).
Penicillin
-resistant, or penicillin-susceptible Streptococcus pneumoniae were isolated from 1 patient (3.8%) and 2 patients (7.7%), respectively out of 26 patients with CAP. There were no detectable pathogens in 8 of 26 patients. The treatment of CAM resulted in complete resolution of all signs and symptoms of
pneumonia
in all the patients and was not accompanied with any adverse events. The overall incidence of laboratory abnormalities was not detectable in the patients evaluated. Although it is important to make differential diagnosis of atypical from bacterial pneumonia in designing therapeutic strategy, it is often difficult to make an appropriate diagnosis in patients with CAP. Because of diagnostic difficulties, CAM with a broad antimicrobial spectrum is recommended as the first-line drug for the treatment of lower respiratory infections, particularly in patients with suspected atypical pneumonia.
...
PMID:[Clinical efficacy of oral clarithromycin monotherapy in patients with mild or moderate community-acquired pneumonia]. 1500 80
Penicillin
resistance threatens the treatment of pneumococcal infections. We used sentinel hospital surveillance (1978 to 2001) and population-based surveillance (1995 to 2001) in seven states in the Active Bacterial Core surveillance of the Emerging Infections Program Network to document the emergence in the United States of invasive pneumococcal isolates with very-high-level penicillin resistance (MIC > or = 8 microg/ml). Very-high-level penicillin resistance was first detected in 1995 in multiple pneumococcal serotypes in three regions of the United States. The prevalence increased from 0.56% (14 of 2,507) of isolates in 1995 to 0.87% in 2001 (P = 0.03), with peaks in 1996 and 2000 associated with epidemics in Georgia and Maryland. For a majority of the strains the MICs of amoxicillin (91%), cefuroxime (100%), and cefotaxime (68%), were > or =8 microg/ml and all were resistant to at least one other drug class.
Pneumonia
(50%) and bacteremia (36%) were the most common clinical presentations. Factors associated with very highly resistant infections included residence in Tennessee, age of <5 or > or =65 years, and resistance to at least three drug classes. Hospitalization and case fatality rates were not higher than those of other pneumococcal infection patients; length of hospital stay was longer, controlling for age. Among the strains from 2000 and 2001, 39% were related to Tennessee(23F)-4 and 35% were related to England(14-)9. After the introduction of the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine, the incidence of highly penicillin resistant infections decreased by 50% among children <5 years of age. The emergence, clonality, and association of very-high-level penicillin resistance with multiple drug resistance requires further monitoring and highlights the need for novel agents active against the pneumococcus.
...
PMID:Emergence of Streptococcus pneumoniae with very-high-level resistance to penicillin. 1527 15
Bacterial respiratory tract infections (RTIs), whether primary or subsequent to viral infection, are a frequent cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Treatment of these infections is most often empirical. Therefore, an antimicrobial's antibacterial spectrum must include the most likely pathogens: Streptococcus pneumoniae, the most frequent cause of community-acquired
pneumonia
(CAP), Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis, and Staphylococcus aureus, as well as atypicals such as Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Legionella pneumophila and Chlamydophila (Chlamydia) pneumoniae. In addition, knowledge of antimicrobial resistance among these key pathogens is imperative for physicians to choose the most appropriate therapeutic agent. The latest data from global surveillance studies indicates that high-level resistance to penicillin (MIC > or =2 mg/l) among isolates of S. pneumoniae varies widely by geographic location. Rates exceed 20% in the USA, Mexico, Japan, Saudi Arabia, Israel, Spain, France, Greece, Hungary, and the Slovak Republic. In South Africa, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and South Korea rates exceed 50%.
Penicillin
non-susceptibility--including isolates exhibiting high-level resistance and intermediate susceptibility (MIC 0.12-1 mg/l)--is frequently found in association with macrolide resistance, which is found at a prevalence of 70-80% in some Asian countries. Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) and tetracycline resistance, either individually or combined with macrolide resistance as multiple resistance, is also associated with reduced susceptibility to penicillin. Another concern about antimicrobial resistance in respiratory tract pathogens is beta-lactamase production among isolates of H. influenzae and M. catarrhalis. However, respiratory fluoroquinolones, of which levofloxacin has been available for the longest time, currently remain active against the great majority of common bacterial respiratory pathogens, including atypicals.
...
PMID:Comparative antimicrobial susceptibility of respiratory tract pathogens. 1531 48
The World Health Organization (WHO) recommends that children with severe
pneumonia
(characterized by cough or difficult breathing, as well as lower chest wall indrawing) be hospitalized and treated with parenteral penicillin. Oral amoxicillin, if equally effective for treating severe
pneumonia
, would address challenges associated with providing parenteral therapy, including risk of transmission of bloodborne pathogens from contaminated needles, exposure to nosocomial pathogens during hospitalization, inadequate access to health care facilities, and cost. The recently completed multicenter international trial of oral amoxicillin versus parenteral penicillin for treatment of severe
pneumonia
demonstrated the equivalency of these agents in children with severe
pneumonia
. This article focuses on the challenges of designing an equivalence study and the threats to the validity of the trial results, particularly the implications of the bias toward finding equivalence when subjects are unlikely to respond to either study therapy. These considerations have implications for use of the Amoxicillin
Penicillin
Pneumonia
International Study (APPIS) results in clinical practice and for potential modification of WHO treatment guidelines.
...
PMID:Challenges in the design of antibiotic equivalency studies: the multicenter equivalency study of oral amoxicillin versus injectable penicillin in children aged 3-59 months with severe pneumonia. 1535 16
Streptococcus pneumoniae is a leading cause of bacterial pneumonia, meningitis, otitis media, and sinusitis; it results in significant morbidity and mortality in patients with
pneumonia
and meningitis. The pneumococcus is a common colonizing bacterium in the respiratory tract; it is especially common in the respiratory tracts of children, where it is frequently exposed to antimicrobial agents. This exposure can lead to resistance.
Penicillin
nonsusceptibility is found in nearly 40% of strains causing disease in adults, although often these cases are treatable with appropriate dosing regimens of many oral and parenteral beta-lactam agents. In the United States resistance to macrolides is widespread--averaging approximately 28%--but geographically variable, ranging from 23% in the northwest to 30% in the northeast. Resistance to tetracyclines and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole are reported in approximately 20% and 35% of isolates, respectively, and resistance to multiple classes of agents is increasingly common. Amoxicillin, amoxicillin-clavulanate, respiratory fluoroquinolones, and clindamycin are currently the most effective agents for treatment of respiratory tract infections caused by S pneumoniae, with >90% of isolates in the United States being susceptible. Vancomycin is the only agent against which resistance has not emerged. Patient groups that are at increased risk for developing resistant pneumococcal infections have been identified and include patients with malignancies, human immunodeficiency virus infection, and sickle-cell disease. Judicious use of antimicrobials is the key to preventing the emergence of further resistance, particularly as few new classes of agents are likely to become available for clinical use in the short term.
...
PMID:Streptococcus pneumoniae: epidemiology and patterns of resistance. 1536 92
Bacteria are robust micro-organisms that can survive even in the presence of antibiotics. This has led to problems treating bacterial infections. Bacteria are the most common cause of infection and Streptococcus pneumoniae is one such infection. This bacterium causes community-acquired
pneumonia
in older people and, though immunisation is available, older people continue to die from pneumococcal
pneumonia
.
Penicillin
continues to be used as the main method of treatment against Streptococcus pneumoniae but antibiotic resistance is increasing
...
PMID:Infections and their treatment in older people. 1583 5
Among infectious diseases,
pneumonia
is still the ;;captain of the men of death.'' Etiologic diagnosis is often unreliable; consequently, clinicians must know epidemiology of community-acquired
pneumonia
for optimizing empiric antibiotic therapy. In recent years, all major pulmonary pathogens have become more and more resistant to conventional antibiotics.
Penicillin
-resistant and even multiresistant pneumococci have spread worldwide, but primarily in the United States, some European countries, South Africa, and the Far East. A similar trend is evidenced by ampicillin-resistant Hemophilus influenzae, whereas Moraxella catarrhalis almost invariably produces beta-lactamases. The widening of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus from hospitals to the community may be the new reality of the 1990s. Increasing erythromycin resistance of Streptococcus pyogenes requires beta-lactam therapy. The spread of both cromosomally and plasmid-mediated beta-lactamases makes treatment of infections caused by gram-negative enterobacilli more difficult. Bacterial resistance creates a challenge for clinicians from the viewpoint of correct and successful management of patients with community-acquired
pneumonia
.
...
PMID:Antibiotic resistance in community-acquired pulmonary pathogens. 1608 16
Streptococcus pneumoniae is the most common cause of both
pneumonia
overall and fatal
pneumonia
. Antibiotic resistance has developed worldwide and is most frequent in pneumococcal serotypes that are most prevalent in children (types/groups 6, 14, 19, and 23). The incidence of pneumococcal disease is the highest in children < 2 years of age and in adults > 65 years of age. Other important risk factors are chronic heart and lung disease, cigarette smoking, and asplenia. A 23-valent capsular polysaccharide vaccine and a heptavalent protein-polysaccharide conjugate vaccine are currently available. The latter is specially designed for pediatric use because small children respond poorly to polysaccharide antigens. Both vaccines are efficacious in prevention of invasive pneumococcal disease. The clinical presentation of pneumococcal
pneumonia
is variable, and neither clinical features nor laboratory or radiographic findings can reliably predict the etiology of
pneumonia
. Blood culture is the most important tool for establishing a definitive diagnosis, but Gram's stains and sputum culture are also of value in skilled hands. A recently developed urinary antigen test may provide a rapid diagnosis of pneumococcal
pneumonia
in adults.
Penicillin
(penicillin G/amoxicillin) remains the drug of choice for strains that are fully sensitive or have a moderately decreased susceptibility to penicillin, whereas cefotaxime and ceftriaxone are the first-line alternatives in cases with higher levels of resistance.
...
PMID:Streptococcus pneumoniae: epidemiology, risk factors, and clinical features. 1638 28
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