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

We investigated the clinical efficacy and safety of aztreonam in the treatment of 50 episodes of infection in 46 adult patients. The clinical condition of patients at the beginning of treatment was critical or poor in 28 of the episodes of infection. Episodes treated were 39 urinary tract infections (12 of them with concomitant bacteremia), 2 soft tissue infections, 8 patients with osteomyelitis (1 with concomitant bacteremia), and one episode of pneumonia. Significant isolated microorganisms were aerobic or facultative gram-negative rods and were responsible for the following episodes of infection (number of episodes): members of the family Enterobacteriaceae (49), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (5), and Haemophilus influenzae (1). The overall rate of clinical response to aztreonam was 94% of the treated episodes. Colonization or superinfection or both occurred in 29 episodes, but only 8 episodes required antimicrobial therapy. Aztreonam seems to be an effective single agent therapy for many bacterial infections. Colonization and superinfection by Candida sp., Streptococcus faecalis or Staphylococcus aureus must be monitored.
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PMID:Evaluation of aztreonam in the treatment of severe bacterial infections. 383 32

During the course of one year, 47 critical care patients with gram-negative bacillary pneumonia at Millard Fillmore Hospital were randomly assigned to aztreonam or tobramycin therapy (two to one). Of these, 40 were fully evaluable for microbiologic and clinical response. All evaluable patients had gram-negative organisms in tracheal aspirate culture specimens and confirmed susceptibility of the organism to both study drugs. There was no difference between the two groups with respect to the percentage of patients who received concurrent antibiotics for gram-positive organisms. More than 60 percent of the patients received mechanical ventilation. Essentially, all had new lung infiltrates as shown by chest radiography, leukocytosis, recent onset of fever, and increased volume of purulent secretions. Half had multilobar pulmonary infiltrates. Their mean age was 73 years, with none under age 50. Most had chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, congestive heart failure, or both. By the prognostic nutritional index criteria, over 70 percent were nutritionally deficient at entry. The majority of infections were caused by Pseudomonas, Enterobacter, Klebsiella, and Escherichia coli. Aztreonam eradicated 92 percent of the causative gram-negative organisms, compared with 57 percent for tobramycin (p less than 0.05). Aztreonam produced a favorable clinical response (cure or improvement) in 93 percent of patients, compared with 50 percent for tobramycin (p less than 0.05). There were no differences in the minor adverse effects observed in the two treatment groups. Overall, aztreonam was superior to tobramycin for treatment of pneumonia due to susceptible gram-negative bacteria in these critical care patients.
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PMID:Treatment with aztreonam or tobramycin in critical care patients with nosocomial gram-negative pneumonia. 388 47

Aztreonam was administered to 226 patients with lower respiratory tract infections--primarily pneumonia (181 patients)--due to gram-negative bacilli. The clinical response rate was 93%, and the microbiologic cure rate was 78%. Most patients received 1-g or 2-g intravenous doses of aztreonam three times daily for at least five days. Ninety-eight of the 226 patients were involved in a randomized comparison of aztreonam with tobramycin; the latter drug was administered to a group of 34 patients. The overall microbiologic cure rates for the two drugs were 86% and 71%, respectively. Aztreonam is effective for the treatment of lower respiratory tract infections due to susceptible gram-negative bacilli.
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PMID:Summary of worldwide clinical trials of aztreonam in patients with lower respiratory tract infections. 390 23

Aztreonam--a new, synthetic, monocyclic beta-lactam antibiotic with excellent in vitro activity and beta-lactamase stability--was used for the treatment of 26 serious infections due to gram-negative bacteria in 23 patients: nine cases of bacteremia, one of endocarditis, one of pneumonia, one of septic arthritis, six of osteomyelitis, five of abscess or soft tissue infection, and three of meningitis. The majority of patients had serious underlying disease, and 18 were in critical or poor condition. The mean age of the patients was 62 years, and the mean duration of therapy was 19 days. The clinical condition of all 23 patients improved during therapy; 20 infections were cured according to clinical criteria. Three of the six instances of therapy failure were due to inadequate debridement. No superinfections, resistant pathogens, or significant adverse reactions were seen. Aztreonam was effective and safe for the treatment of serious gram-negative infections.
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PMID:Clinical evaluation of aztreonam therapy for serious infections due to gram-negative bacteria. 390 40

Aztreonam (E-0734, AZT) was administered to pneumonia and chronic respiratory tract infections. The results were as follows: AZT was administered to 29 patients. Twenty-six cases were evaluable and 3 cases were excluded from evaluation of efficacy because 1 was Gram-positive infection, 2 were unclear symptom of infection. Pneumonia was 4 cases. Chronic respiratory tract infections were 22 cases. Clinical efficacy was judged as follows; excellent in 7 cases, good in 10 cases, fair in 5 cases and poor in 4 cases, then the efficacy rate was 65.4%. Efficacy rate in pneumonia, acute aggravation of diffuse panbronchiolitis and bronchiectasis with infection was 50%, 67% and 83%, respectively. Bacteriological response was judged on 21 cases with eradication rate was 66.7%. Bacteriological response classified by pathogen was as follows: All 6 isolates of H. influenzae, 2 in 6 isolates of P. aeruginosa, 4 in 5 isolates of H. parainfluenzae and all 3 isolates of K. pneumoniae were cleared. Total eradicated rate was 74.1%. Eruption was observed in 1 case as side effect. Abnormal laboratory findings were observed in 4 cases. Elevation of GOT and GPT was in 3 cases. Increase of eosinophil and basophil was in 1 case. AZT was considered to be a useful antibiotic for the treatment of respiratory tract infections, especially chronic respiratory tract infections, caused by Gram-negative pathogens.
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PMID:[Clinical study of aztreonam on respiratory tract infections caused by gram-negative pathogens]. 391 26

Aztreonam is a novel antimicrobial agent belonging to the monobactam class of antibiotics. It inhibits both beta-lactamase-producing and non-beta-lactamase-producing aerobic gram-negative bacilli, but it has no activity against gram-positive species or against anaerobic species. The efficacy of aztreonam in the treatment of infection in 76 patients and its safety in 87 patients was evaluated. The majority (91 percent) of patients had significant underlying disease, and 47 percent were critically ill. Aztreonam produced an overall clinical response of 86 percent, with 10 of 11 cases of bacteremia cured, including four due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa, seven of eight cases of pneumonia, and seven of nine episodes of osteomyelitis. Infections due to bacteria resistant to ampicillin, carbenicillin, cefazolin, cefamandole, cefoxitin, and gentamicin were cured. Although 15 of 18 patients with exacerbations of pulmonary infection due to P. aeruginosa showed clinical improvement, bacteriologic cure was not achieved, as has been noted with other drugs. Similarly, patients with major underlying structural abnormalities of the urinary tract showed early relapses of bacteriuria. Aztreonam combined with antistaphylococcal, antistreptococcal, or antianaerobic agents provided an alternative to aminoglycoside use in these non-neutropenic patients. Administration of 1 or 2 g every eight hours yield serum bactericidal levels well in excess of 1:8 against all Enterobacteriaceae and some P. aeruginosa strains. There was a low incidence of adverse side effects, none serious. Overall, aztreonam is a useful alternative to the drugs available for use in hospital-acquired gram-negative infections and provides a chance for more directed therapy.
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PMID:Use of aztreonam in the treatment of serious infections due to multiresistant gram-negative organisms, including Pseudomonas aeruginosa. 403 74

Twenty-one patients with serious gram-negative infections were treated with aztreonam. Twenty of these were clinical and microbiologic cures; there was one clinical improvement with microbiologic persistence. No bacteria became resistant. Cure rates were: bone and joint (11 of 11); skin and soft tissue (six of six); pneumonia (two of two); perinephric abscess (one of one); and intra-abdominal abscess (zero of one). The bacteria responsible for these infections included Pseudomonas aeruginosa (12), Serratia marcescens (two), Enterobacter gergoviae (three), Enterobacter aerogenes (two), Escherichia coli (one), Citrobacter diversus (one), and Hemophilus influenzae (one). Aztreonam was well tolerated. Significant serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase/serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase elevations developed in three patients, but none was symptomatic and all resolved after therapy was stopped. Two patients in whom a rash developed were receiving other antibiotics (vancomycin and metronidazole), making the cause of the rash unclear. Diarrhea developed in a single patient with Pseudomonas osteomyelitis, who also was receiving cefazolin for Staphylococcus aureus superinfection of his decubitus ulcer. Aztreonam was highly effective against gram-negative bacilli, including P. aeruginosa. The only clear-cut side effect was an asymptomatic rise in serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase/serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase levels in three patients.
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PMID:Treatment of gram-negative infections with aztreonam. 403 77

Aztreonam (AZT) was evaluated for its safety, clinical efficacy and pharmacokinetics in children. AZT was effective in all the 16 children with Gram-negative bacterial infections. The diagnoses included acute bronchitis and pneumonia (11), UTI (2), UTI with bacteremia (1), purulent meningitis (1) and acute mucositis (1). The etiologic agents were H. influenzae (10), B. catarrhalis (1), N. meningitidis group C (1), E. coli (3) and P. aeruginosa (2). The serum half-life was approximately 1.2 hours after intravenous bolus injection. Penetration into the inflamed cerebrospinal fluid was good not only in acute purulent meningitis but also in viral meningitis. From the present study, AZT is a safe and effective antibiotic when used in children with Gram-negative bacterial infections.
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PMID:[Clinical and pharmacokinetic evaluations of aztreonam in children]. 409 55

Aztreonam (AZT) is the first monobactam antibiotic that has significant activity in vitro against aerobic Gram-negative bacteria but not against Gram-positive or anaerobic bacteria. The agent was used 120-200 mg/kg in daily dose to treat 10 hospitalized cases of refractory infections in pediatric field. There were 3 cases of 1 pneumonia, 4 cases of urinary tract infections, 2 cases of pyogenic meningitis and 1 case of septicemia. Seven aerobic Gram-negative bacteria were isolated from patients and 4 bacteria were eradicated by treatment. Clinical cure was achieved in 8 out of 10 cases without adverse reaction or drug toxicity.
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PMID:[Clinical efficacy of aztreonam in refractory infections in children]. 409 68

Aztreonam at doses of 1 or 2 g given intramuscularly or intravenously every 8 h for 7 to 42 days was given to 55 patients, most of them suffering from difficult-to-treat infections either because the isolated pathogens were multiresistant or because of the location of the infection. Infections included: urinary tract (23 cases), deep soft tissue phlegmon (12 cases), chronic osteomyelitis in exacerbation (7 cases), abscesses (7 cases), pneumonia (4 cases), and external otitis (2 cases). In culture specimens, Pseudomonas aeruginosa (24 isolates) and various Enterobacteriaceae species (37 isolates) were isolated with MICs ranging from 0.25 to 16 micrograms/ml. Clinically, at the completion of treatment and after a 6-week posttreatment follow-up, 45 (81.6%) patients were cured, 4 (7.2%) improved, 3 (5.6%) relapsed, and 3 (5.6%) failed to respond to therapy. Bacteriologically, at the end of treatment, the pathogen was eradicated in 50 patients (91%) and persisted in 5 (9%). After a 6-week follow-up, cultures remained sterile in 33 patients (60.0%), 16 (29.1%) relapsed, in 6 (10.9%) bacteria persisted, and superinfection was reported in 4 (7.3%) patients. No appreciable adverse effects or toxicity was observed. From the reported results, it is concluded that aztreonam is a valuable addition to the field of antimicrobial chemotherapy that can be used effectively and safely in the treatment of a variety of gram-negative infections.
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PMID:Evaluation of aztreonam in difficult-to-treat infections with prolonged posttreatment follow-up. 654 53


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