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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thirteen of 100 fallow deer, aged between 6 months and 10 years, died over a 5 week period. The deaths occurred in 2 outbreaks 3 weeks apart. Both outbreaks were preceded by at least 3 days of cold wet and windy weather, and were associated with water-logged pastures. Affected animals were usually found dead, with a frothy blood-stained nasal discharge. In the 8 deer necropsied, gross lesions included widespread subserosal petechial haemorrhages, severe pulmonary congestion and oedema with froth-filled airways, and fibrinous pneumonia and pleurisy in 4 deer. Two deer, also, had extensive subcutaneous petechial and ecchymotic haemorrhages and oedema of skeletal musculature. Histologically, the most significant lesions were present in the lungs. Moderate to severe pulmonary congestion and oedema, with fibrinous exudation into alveoli and septal oedema, were present in all deer. In some deer these changes were accompanied by a diffuse infiltration with polymorphonuclear leucocytes. Pasteurella multocida was isolated from a range of tissues from 7 of 8 deer examined. The remaining animal had been treated with antibiotics 8 hours before death. The isolates had identical polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis patterns and were of the same antigenic type-Carter group A, Heddleston type 3,4.
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PMID:Pasteurella multocida septicaemia in fallow deer (Dama dama). 188 12

Electron microscopic investigations on the respiratory tract of piglets with and without Mycoplasma hyorhinis infection (10th day of life) partly combined with swim stress (15 degrees C water temperature) (n = 20/20) yielded the following results: colonization of Mycoplasma hyorhinis in the ciliary zone of trachea and bronchi in 15 out of 40 piglets (37.5%); the evidence rate of Mycoplasma hyorhinis in pneumonic lungs (8 out of 12 = 66.7%) was significantly higher than in nonpneumonic lungs (7 out of 28 = 25.0%) and highest in experimentally infected piglets with swim stress (9 out of 16 = 56.2%). Ultrastructural lesions: loss of cilia; bleb-formation; hydropic degeneration and desquamation of ciliary cells; the occurrence of cilia-free and immature epithelial cells; alveolar collapse; microatelectasis; oedematous swelling of pneumocyte I; accumulation of surfactant in the alveoli; hyperplasia of pneumocyte II; exudation of mononuclear macrophages and neutrophils with numerous digestion vacuoles; several lymphocytes and plasma cells, only a little lymphohistiocytic interstitial and peribronchial infiltration. Phagocytized mycoplasmas were found within the resorption vacuoles of neutrophils in the tracheobronchial area, for this once in alveoli, not (more) against in alveolar macrophages. The results were discussed with regard to etiology and pathogenicity of enzootic pneumonia in pigs.
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PMID:[The pathology and pathogenesis of experimental Mycoplasma hyorhinis infection of piglets with and without thermomotor stress. 2. Electron microscopic study results]. 191 Feb 34

An outbreak of infection caused by a previously undescribed Gram-negative bacterium affected people attending a hot (37 degrees C) spring spa in France in 1987. Thirty-five case of pneumonia and two cases of meningitis occurred. None of these patients died. Attack rates were significantly higher for patients above 70 years old and for male patients. An epidemiological comparison of the 26 hospitalized cases with 52 matched controls suggests that spa treatment early on the first day (OR = 4.8) and attendance at the vapour baths (OR = 10.7) were significant risk factors for acquiring the infection. Person-to-person spread was not thought to have occurred. The same bacterium was isolated from the hot spring water. All strains studied shows a single rRNA gene restriction pattern. Epidemiological data indicated that the thermal water was the source of infection. This outbreak stresses the need for increased surveillance of infections in people attending hot spring spas.
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PMID:An outbreak of pneumonia and meningitis caused by a previously undescribed gram-negative bacterium in a hot spring spa. 193 59

Legionella is a common cause of community- and hospital-acquired pneumonia. New information on the pathogenesis of infection and the host immune response is reviewed. Specialized laboratory tests, especially culture, are necessary for diagnosis since the clinical presentation is nonspecific. New antimicrobial agents and innovative approaches to disinfection of water distribution systems are presented.
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PMID:Legionellosis. 195

Surfactant inactivation has been shown to be a significant factor in animal models of lung injury and may also be important in some forms of respiratory failure in full-term newborns. Fourteen full-term newborns with respiratory failure associated with pneumonia (7 patients) and meconium aspiration syndrome (7 patients) were treated with 90 mg/kg of a calf lung surfactant extract, given intratracheally up to every 6 hours for a maximum of four doses. The group mean fraction of inspired oxygen (FI02) before treatment was 0.99 +/- 0.01 SEM, and the mean airway pressure (MAP) was 14.6 +/- 1.0 cm H2O. Patients showed significant improvement in oxygenation after initial surfactant treatment, with the arterial-alveolar oxygenation ratio (a/A ratio) rising from 0.09 +/- 0.01 before surfactant treatment to 0.22 +/- 0.05 by 15 minutes (P = .03) and remaining improved for 6 hours. The oxygenation index, incorporating MAP as well as oxygen variables, also improved significantly from 26.2 +/- 3.1 to 11.2 +/- 1.7 at 15 minutes (P less than .001), with improvement sustained for more than 6 hours. Chest radiographs were blindly scored from 0 (normal) to 5 (severe opacification), and these improved with marginal significance after initial surfactant treatment (from 2.9 +/- 0.2 to 2.5 +/- 0.2, P = .05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Surfactant treatment of full-term newborns with respiratory failure. 198 3

Guidelines for the prevention of nosocomial pneumonia specify that only sterile fluids should be used for aerosol therapy; however, this recommendation may not be uniformly followed. Thirteen patients with nosocomial pneumonia due to Legionella pneumophila serogroup 3 (Lp3) were identified at a community hospital in the period from 1984 through 1988; 12 patients (92%) had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; and 9 patients (69%) died. An epidemiologic investigation suggested that the use of nebulizers to deliver medication was associated with acquiring legionnaires' disease. The hospital potable water system was contaminated with Lp3, and a survey indicated that tap water was commonly used to wash medication nebulizers. Lp3 in respirable-size droplets was isolated from aerosols generated by a nebulizer containing Lp3 at one-tenth the concentration found in the hospital potable water. These findings support the recommendation that only sterile fluids be used for filling or cleaning respiratory care equipment and suggest that this guideline is not universally followed.
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PMID:Nosocomial Legionnaires' disease and use of medication nebulizers. 199 43

Although aerosolized pentamidine (AP) has recently been approved for prophylaxis and is undergoing clinical trials for treatment of pneumocystis, pneumonia (PCP), factors important in the deposition of AP have not been described. Using radioaerosol techniques, deposition was measured in 22 patients receiving AP for prophylaxis or treatment of PCP. In all patients total and regional deposition of pentamidine, breathing pattern, pulmonary function (PFT), regional ventilation, and type of nebulizer were analyzed. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) was performed 24 h after inhalation to assess the relationship between pentamidine levels in BAL fluid and measured aerosol deposition. The nebulizers tested were the Marquest Respirgard II and the Cadema AeroTech II, both previously characterized in our laboratory. The aerosol particles consist of water droplets containing dissolved pentamidine and technetium 99m bound to albumin. Analysis of particles sampled during inhalation via cascade impaction confirmed a close relationship between radioactivity in the droplets and the concentration of pentamidine as measured by HPLC (r = 0.971, p less than 0.0001; n = 18). Deposition was measured by capturing inhaled and exhaled particles on absolute filters and measuring radioactivity. This technique allows the determination of the deposition fraction (DF, the fraction of the amount inhaled that is deposited), which provides information on factors strictly related to the patient. To confirm the filter measurements, pentamidine deposition was also measured by gamma camera. The camera measurement was possible because each patient's thoracic attenuation of radioactivity was determined by a quantitative perfusion scan (mg pentamidine deposited via both techniques, r = 0.949, p less than 0.0001; n = 26). Regional lung volume and ventilation were determined by xenon 133 equilibrium scan and washout. Pentamidine deposition varied markedly between patients, but BAL levels of pentamidine significantly correlated with measured deposition (r = 0.819, p less than 0.01; n = 9). DF averaged 0.621 +/- 0.027 (SEM) and did not correlate with any measured lung parameter, including breathing pattern and PFT. Regional deposition did not correlate with regional ventilation. The major factor influencing pentamidine deposition was aerosol delivery (mg deposited versus mg inhaled; r = 0.963, p less than 0.0001; n = 26). The nebulizer was an important determinant of aerosol delivery, with the AeroTech delivering between 2.5 and 5 times more drug than the Respirgard. These observations are important in assessing treatment failure and cost of therapy.
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PMID:Factors determining pulmonary deposition of aerosolized pentamidine in patients with human immunodeficiency virus infection. 200 84

The adverse effects of prolonged immobility are due primarily to gravitational effects on blood flow and ventilation, impairment of the normal mucociliary escalator and possibly an increase in extravascular lung water. However, CLRT theoretically should reverse these abnormalities. The sequence of events that culminate in LRTI or pneumonia is unclear; however, low tidal volumes, increased extravascular lung water and the accumulation of bronchopulmonary secretions may lead to atelectasis, a well-known precursor of pneumonia. Three prospective, randomized studies evaluating patients with acute head trauma, orthopedic injuries requiring traction and blunt chest trauma all showed a decreased incidence of LRTI or pneumonia with CLRT compared with those treated in a conventional bed and turned every 2 h by the nursing staff. In general, the methodology was sound with early randomization, use of precise criteria to define LRTI and pneumonia and appropriate observation. The fourth study performed in a medical ICU with a heterogeneous group of patients did not show a difference in incidence of nosocomial pneumonia between treatment in CLRT and a conventional bed, but did show a decreased length of ICU stay for patients with pneumonia treated with CLRT. It appears that if CLRT is to be effective, it needs to be instituted early in the patient's illness. The length of time that CLRT should be utilized is unknown; however, intuitively, as long as the patient is at risk, the therapy should be continued. It is also unclear whether CLRT should be started at full rotation immediately or begun at lesser degrees of rotation and advanced serially over several hours. Another unknown is the minimum time that CLRT should be administered per day. In the studies discussed, most patients were rotated for 10 to 16 h/day. The minimum degree of rotation necessary for an effect is also unknown; in the studies cited, rotations from 40 degrees to 62 degrees in each direction were used. Based on the current data, the early use of CLRT in comatose or otherwise immobile patients decreases the incidence of LRTI including pneumonia over the first 7 to 14 days of ICU care. The prevention of pneumonia and more rapid transfer from the ICU should offset the additional expense of a specialized bed. The data suggest that a multicenter study with accrual of a large number of patients to evaluate this form of therapy in a prospective, randomized study is necessary. If the hypothesis that CLRT decreases the incidence of nosocomial pneumonia in the ICU is proven, the impact on critical care in the 90s would be substantial.
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PMID:Continuous lateral rotational therapy and nosocomial pneumonia. 201 90

About one third of adults surveyed in South Australia have shown evidence of past silent infection with Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1. However, the annual notification rate for symptomatic disease is only about 0.5 per 100,000 residents in non-epidemic years. The male to female ratio is 2.5 to one and approximately 50% of the cases are at least 60 years of age. Cases have presented more in summer and in the metropolitan areas. Twenty cases of Legionnaires' disease occurred during the summer of 1985-86. A cooling tower was held to be the principal source with aerosols being dispersed up to three kilometers away during an atmospheric thermal inversion. A subsequent outbreak of 22 L. longbeachae serogroup 1 infections had no marked geographic clustering. The outbreak commenced in spring and cases were distinguished as active gardeners. L. longbeachae was found in garden soil and it is hypothesised that this soil inhabitant can become aerosolised and inhaled during gardening. The potential for primary prevention of Legionnaires' disease is discussed in relation to water-handling equipment and the need for early precautionary treatment of all community-acquired pneumonia as suspect Legionnaires' disease is emphasised.
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PMID:Epidemiological characteristics of Legionella infection in South Australia: implications for disease control. 203 80

Physicians investigated a nosocomial diarrhea outbreak among 11 2 year old undernourished children in the nutrition service of the pediatric teaching hospital, Hospital Infantile, in Mexico City, Mexico in April 1988. Health practitioners took at least 2 stool samples from each ill child to be analyzed for Cryptosporidium oocysts. The attack rate stood st 82%. The hospital admitted a malnourished child with chronic diarrhea and pneumonia on March 22. Laboratory tests revealed that he had many Cryptosporidium oocysts and was positive for HIV. Hospital staff did not isolate him. He died on May 9 of Escherichia coli and Candida septicemia. The outbreak ended 1 week later. Laboratory tests detected Cryptosporidium oocysts in 9 cases all of whom were 3-13 months old. Further the symptoms (mean duration 14 days, fever [mean peak 38.6 degrees Celsius, and vomiting] matched those of other reported Cryptosporidium diarrhea outbreaks. The epidemic curve suggested a common source of the outbreak. Since the infants received intravenous feedings or sterilized formula, food and water could not have been the source. The physicians believed the AIDS case was that source. Direct person to person transmission was probably not responsible since each infant had his/her own separate crib. Even though the physicians could not conclusively identify the vehicle of transmission, it was most likely the hands of hospitals staff either directly by touching the infants or by contaminating the nasogastric tubes. After the outbreak, the physicians observed that only 30% of medical personnel indeed washed their hands before caring for an infant. 4 previous studies on nosocomial Cryptosporidium diarrhea outbreaks also reported the source case as immunodeficient, but these studies only included adults.
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PMID:An outbreak of Cryptosporidium diarrhea in a pediatric hospital. 204 74


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