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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We clinically investigated 40 cases of respiratory infection due to B. catarrhalis by transtracheal aspiration (TTA). The cases consisted of acute bronchitis (13 cases),
pneumonia
(14 cases), and chronic lower respiratory tract infection (13 cases). The infection was monomicrobial in 17 cases and polymicrobial in 23 cases with respect to the organisms isolated from TTA. The principal organisms isolated in combination with B. catarrhalis in cases of polymicrobial infection were S. pneumoniae and
H. influenzae
. All of the 6 cases of death were patients with
pneumonia
who had malnutrition and immunological hypofunction. These results suggest that B. catarrhalis is an important pathogen in respiratory infection.
...
PMID:[Clinical study of respiratory infection due to Branhamella catarrhalis using transtracheal aspiration]. 163 54
Choosing appropriate antimicrobial therapy for patients with
pneumonia
requires knowledge of the etiologic agents seen in specific kinds of patients at specific times and places. For community-acquired
pneumonia
, there is an important difference in the agents seen in the normal and the compromised host. The normal host most often presents with viral, mycoplasmal, or pneumococcal
pneumonia
. The exact place of Chlamydia pneumoniae is still under study. A normal host who aspirates is at risk of anaerobic
pneumonia
. Normal hosts with influenza may acquire superinfection with Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, or Staphylococcus aureus. Under specific epidemiologic conditions, community-acquired
pneumonia
may be due to Legionella species, Yersinia pestis, Francisella tularensis, Coxiella burnetii, Chlamydia psittaci, a mycotic agent, or tuberculosis. Patients with chronic bronchitis and emphysema are predisposed to
H. influenzae
, Moraxella catarrhalis, and S. pneumoniae infections. HIV-infected patients are likely to have Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and
pneumonia
due to cytomegalovirus, S. pneumoniae, and
H. influenzae
. Patients with diabetes, nursing-home patients, hospitalized patients, immuno-compromised patients, and patients with recent antibiotic therapy are predisposed to
pneumonia
due to Gram-negative aerobic bacilli of enteric and environmental origin. Initial therapy should be directed at the likely organism or organisms based on hospital susceptibility surveillance. In the normal host with community-acquired
pneumonia
, the therapy will often be penicillin G or erythromycin. In the patient predisposed to Gram-negative
pneumonia
, a third-generation cephalosporin with or without an aminoglycoside is the usual choice.
...
PMID:Pneumonia. Patient profiles, choice of empiric therapy, and the place of third-generation cephalosporins. 173 Jan 86
We report a multicentric, open trial of intravenous followed by oral ofloxacin, 400 mg every 12 h, as therapy for 100 cases of nosocomial
pneumonia
and community-acquired
pneumonia
requiring hospitalization. The typical subject was 57 yr old, and underlying diseases, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases (COPD), diabetes mellitus, and congestive heart failure, were common. For 10 subjects previous therapy had failed. There were 118 pathogens isolated in blood or sputum; S. pneumoniae was the most common (42), followed by
H. influenzae
(13), Klebsiella spp. (11), and S. aureus (10). Ofloxacin was administered for an average of 5.7 days intravenously followed by 6.9 days orally. Response to therapy was judged to be cure in 71 subjects, improvement in 24, and failure in 5. Among the more seriously ill subjects, ofloxacin therapy was successful for four of five immunocompromised subjects, for 12 of 12 subjects with nosocomial
pneumonia
, three of whom were on the ventilator, and for nine of 10 subjects with community-acquired
pneumonia
and bacteremia, including seven of eight cases due to S. pneumoniae. Univariate risk factor analysis revealed underlying COPD and/or tachypnea upon admission to be associated with failure of ofloxacin therapy, with bacteremia suggestive of failure. Conversely, ofloxacin was equally effective in cases in whom previous therapy failed and in cases of nosocomial
pneumonia
, multilobar
pneumonia
, and/or
pneumonia
due to S. pneumoniae. Results for P. aeruginosa were inconclusive. Intravenous followed by oral ofloxacin was highly effective in many difficult cases of
pneumonia
.
...
PMID:Parenteral followed by oral ofloxacin for nosocomial pneumonia and community-acquired pneumonia requiring hospitalization. 173 95
Acute respiratory infections in children aged less than 5 years in the Eastern Highlands of Papua New Guinea were investigated bacteriologically for 10 years from November 1978. Haemophilus influenzae and Streptococcus pneumoniae were responsible for 73% of all bacteria cultured from lung aspirate (83 samples), 85.5% from blood (1024 samples) and 92% from cerebrospinal fluid (155 samples). Nonencapsulated
H. influenzae
was carried by up to 90% of children and was the predominant haemophilus type cultured from lung tissue. Mixed infections of the lung with two types of
H. influenzae
(8 cases) and both
H. influenzae
and S. pneumoniae (18 cases), commonly together with other organisms of questionable pathogenicity, reflected the proximity of this organ to the upper respiratory tract. Serotype b accounted for 62% and 82% of
H. influenzae
isolated from bacteraemic
pneumonia
and meningitis cases, respectively. Polymicrobic bacteraemic
pneumonia
occurred in 16 children. Both
H. influenzae
and S. pneumoniae establish dense, unregulated long-term colonization in the nasopharynx during the neonatal period. Each inhibit autochthonous microflora by mechanisms that are currently unclear. Infections with two or more types occur in 30% (S. pneumoniae) and 60% (
H. influenzae
) of carriage-positive children. 70-75% of
H. influenzae
and S. pneumoniae isolates from blood concomitantly colonize the upper respiratory tract. Intense exposure of Papua New Guinean children to penicillin at all levels of health care since the 1940s has resulted in widespread relative resistance among pneumococci to this antibiotic. Resistant strains are now found in 32 serotypes, and in children penicillin resistance is present in 75% of all carriage strains and 52% and 22% of blood and cerebrospinal fluid isolates, respectively. Penicillin-susceptible and resistant pneumococcal serotypes commonly coexist in multiply populated carriage sites. Resistance to betalactam antibiotics is rare among
H. influenzae
strains and resistance has not been detected in either
H. influenzae
or S. pneumoniae to chloramphenicol, erythromycin, tetracycline or cotrimoxazole. It should not be assumed that the technology of respiratory bacteriology as it is practised in developed countries can be transferred to the third world for utilization in paediatric aetiology and carriage studies. Respiratory bacteriology strategies as they evolved in Goroka were subject to diverse influences. The type distribution of the major causative agents defied fashionable beliefs, generated the need for more precise epidemiological differentiation and, by virtue of their carriage density, cultural properties and response to commonly used antibiotics, required the introduction or development of compatible diagnostic procedures.
...
PMID:The bacteriology of acute pneumonia and meningitis in children in Papua New Guinea: assumptions, facts and technical strategies. 175 Feb 63
Five percent fine granule preparation of cefdinir (CFDN, FK482) was administered to 30 patients with acute febrile respiratory tract infections (RTI) at 4.9-21.1 mg/kg/day divided into 3 portions. And 10% fine granule preparation of CFDN was also administered to 11 patients with acute febrile RTI and 1 patient with urinary tract infection at 10.0-20.0 mg/kg/day divided into 3 portions. Good clinical effects observed in 21 of 24 patients (87.5%) with acute pharyngitis, 12 of 13 patients (92.3%) with acute tonsillitis, 2 of 4 patients (50.0%) with
pneumonia
and a patient with urinary tract infection. From these patients, 34 causative organisms were isolated. Ten (83.3%) of 12 strains of Staphylococcus aureus, all 6 strains of Streptococcus pyogenes and 1 strain of Streptococcus pneumoniae, 6 (46.2%) of 13 strains of Haemophillus influenzae and 1 strain of Escherichia coli were eradicated from these patients. Among the patients with
pneumonia
, CFDN 20 mg/kg/day dose group showed better clinical responses and better bacteriological effects against
H. influenzae
among the patients given CFDN 20 mg/kg/day dose group than those given CFDN 5 mg/kg/day dose group. Side effects were noted in 2 cases, one case had soft stools and the other had diarrheas.
...
PMID:[Clinical studies of cefdinir in pediatric infections]. 176 66
Clinical evaluation in pediatrics on cefdinir (CFDN, FK482) (5% fine granules), a new oral cephem, was performed. 1. CFDN was administered to 112 pediatric patients with ages between 1 month to 13 years with various infections. Dose levels used were 3.0-8.9 mg/kg (mean 5.1 mg/kg) t.i.d. for 3-14 days (mean 6.7 days). The studied patients included 2 patients with scarlet fever, 6 with acute pharyngitis, 6 with acute rhinopharyngitis, 52 with acute purulent tonsillitis, 8 with acute bronchitis, 24 with acute
pneumonia
, 7 with acute urinary tract infections, 1 with acute vaginitis, and 6 with impetigo. Total doses ranged from 0.6 to 4.05 g. One hundred eleven of the 112 patients were evaluated for clinical efficacy and all the patients were evaluated for safety. 2. Clinical effects were excellent in 51 cases, good in 57, and fair in 3 with an extremely high efficacy rate of 97.3%. Efficacy rates were 100% in scarlet fever, acute pharyngitis, acute purulent tonsillitis, acute bronchitis, acute vaginitis and impetigo, and 83.3%, 95.7%, 85.7% in acute rhinopharyngitis, acute
pneumonia
, and acute urinary tract infections, respectively. Good clinical effects were observed regardless of diseases. 3. Causative organisms were identified in 79 cases, of which 71 were found to be monobacterial infections and 8 were found to be multi-bacterial infections. In mono-bacterial infections, clinical efficacies were 100% for those caused by Staphylococcus aureus/Streptococcus pyogenes/Streptococcus pneumoniae/beta-Streptococcus except those in A and B groups with an overall efficacy of 100% against Gram-positive cocci (GPC) and they were 89.5%, 100%, 100% for those caused by Haemophilus influenzae, Haemophilus parainfluenzae, and Escherichia coli, respectively, with an overall efficacy of 90.3% in Gram-negative rods (GNR). In multi-bacterial infections also, a clinical efficacy of 100% was obtained. 4. Bacteriological effects were studied for 89 strains in the 79 cases. The eradication rate for a few strains of S. pneumoniae was low, 25%, but it was 100% for S. aureus, with the same results for S. pyogenes, and beta-Streptococcus. The eradication rate on GPC was high 94.1%. Among GNR, 66.7% of E. coli, 50.0% of
H. influenzae
, and 71.4% of H. parainfluenzae was eradicated. The overall eradication rate for GNR was 55.3%, lower than that for GPC. Microbial substitutions were observed in 13 cases, with Haemophilus sp. replacing other bacteria. 5. Diarrhea and soft stools were noted in 4 and 2 patients, respectively. The severity of these side effects, however, was slight and it was possible to continue the CFDN treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Clinical evaluation of cefdinir 5% fine granules in pediatrics]. 176 67
Pneumonia
caused by common pyogenic bacteria occurs frequently in HIV-infected patients. Its clinical presentation has been described as being similar to that seen in non-immunosuppressed hosts but clearly different to that of opportunistic pneumonias. An atypical presentation has rarely been seen. In a 10-month period, we saw 12 HIV-infected patients who presented with Haemophilus influenzae pneumonia which was clinically and radiologically indistinguishable from Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. Ten of the patients were intravenous drug users and were in different stages of HIV disease. The clinical picture was characterized by a prolonged course (median 4 weeks), non-productive cough, dyspnoea, and absence of findings usually present in bacterial pneumonia. Laboratory data frequently showed absence of leukocytosis, increased lactate dehydrogenase levels, hypoxaemia, and decreased CD4+ cell counts. All presented with interstitial or mixed bilateral infiltrates. Resistance to ampicillin and trimethoprim-sulphamethoxazole were each found in seven cases. Eleven patients were cured with antibiotic therapy, although five relapsed.
H. influenzae
pneumonia
should be considered in HIV-infected patients who present with pulmonary symptoms and bilateral infiltrates of subacute or chronic onset. Clinical resolution of
pneumonia
is the usual outcome, but recurrences of infection are frequent.
...
PMID:Latent Haemophilus influenzae pneumonia in patients infected with HIV. 177 77
We conducted a study on the pharmacokinetics and clinical application of cefpirome (CPR) in children. 1. A single intravenous injection of 20 mg/kg of CPR was given to a two-month-old boy, and the concentration of the drug in the blood was measured. Fifteen minutes after administration, the concentration was 53.3 micrograms/ml, and it gradually decreased thereafter, reaching a level of 5.18 micrograms/ml after 8 hours with a half-life in the plasma of 2.36 hours. 2. A single intravenous injection of 700 mg (50 mg/kg) of CPR and that of cefotaxime (CTX) were given to a girl with suppurative meningitis (3 years old, 14 kg, causative bacteria, Haemophilus influenzae), and concentrations of the drugs in plasma and cerebrospinal fluid after 1 hour were measured. On the second day of illness, the concentration of CTX in the plasma was 39.4 micrograms/ml and the concentration of desacetyl-CTX (D-CTX) was 25.2 micrograms/ml, while concentrations in the cerebrospinal fluid were 6.22 micrograms/ml (15.8%) for CTX and 3.94 micrograms/ml (15.6%) for D-CTX. On the third day of illness, concentration of CPR in the plasma was 59.3 micrograms/ml, while its concentration in the cerebrospinal fluid was 7.44 micrograms/ml (12.5%). 3. CPR was intravenously administered in daily dosages of 37.7-75.0 mg/kg in 2-3 portions for periods of 4-15 days to 2 patients with septicemia (causative bacteria, Klebsiella pneumoniae in 1 case and Escherichia coli in the other), 1 patient with bronchitis (K. pneumoniae), 9 patients with
pneumonia
(1 case of Staphylococcus aureus, 3 cases of
H. influenzae
, 2 cases of Haemophilus parainfluenzae, 1 case of K. pneumoniae + Pseudomonas cepacia, 2 cases of
H. influenzae
+ Branhamella catarrhalis), 2 patients with cellulitis (1 case of S. aureus, 1 case, causative agent unknown), 1 patient with suppurative lymphadenitis (causative agent, unknown), 1 patient with staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome, 1 patient with renal abscess (causative agent, unknown), and 1 patient with a urinary tract infection (E. coli), for a total of 18 patients, with excellent results in 9 cases and good results in 9 cases, hence an efficacy rate of 100% was obtained. 4. As an accompanying side-effect, eruption was observed in 1 of the 18 patients, but when administration was discontinued, the symptom gradually receded, and it disappeared by the 4th day.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Pharmacokinetic and clinical studies of cefpirome in pediatric field]. 182 75
A method of polysaccharide antigen precipitation in urine treated with 1:1 ethanol-acetone solution, followed by heat treatment with 0.1 M EDTA were developed for detection of S. pneumoniae and
H. influenzae
type b. Counterimmunoelectrophoresis and latex agglutination were employed to detect the antigens, in paired samples of urine and serum, and also in pleural fluid samples from children with clinical diagnosis of acute
pneumonia
. Counterimmunoelectrophoresis and latex agglutination showed better results in urine than in serum and also in smaller initial volumes of urine from the onset of illness or during the first days of antibiotic therapy. The results obtained in counterimmunoelectrophoresis and latex agglutination showed that ethanol-acetone solution increased the yield of polysaccharide antigen precipitation while heating with EDTA diminished the probability of false-positive results and cross-reactivity between S. pneumoniae and
H. influenzae
type b. The results, statistically evaluated, suggest that urine is a body fluid in which the bacterial antigens may be detected in the acute
pneumonia
. This is of importance in patients previously treated with antibiotics which may inhibit bacterial growth in the culture media.
...
PMID:[Detection of bacterial antigens in acute pneumonia: methods of preparing the urine, serum, and pleural fluid samples for immunodiagnostic assays]. 184
Haemophilus influenzae, one of the bacteria comprising the commensal flora of the human upper respiratory tract, is also pathogenic and causes both localized and invasive (septicemic) infections. The major focus of attention and research has been on infections caused by serotype b organisms, which cause several life-threatening illnesses in children, including meningitis and acute respiratory infection (ARI; e.g., epiglottitis,
pneumonia
). Type b polysaccharide-protein conjugate vaccines are at an advanced stage of development and implementation; however, these vaccines will not protect against noncapsulated (nontypable) strains of
H. influenzae
or strains expressing capsular polysaccharides other than serotype b, strains which cause a substantial proportion of ARI (especially
pneumonia
) among infants, particularly in developing countries. The magnitude of this problem, which contributes to many thousands-perhaps millions-of deaths each year, emphasizes the need for research on the epidemiology, pathogenesis, virulence factors, immune mechanisms, and forms of treatment relevant to ARI caused by
H. influenzae
in infants and implies that such studies should be given a high priority.
...
PMID:The role of Haemophilus influenzae in the pathogenesis of pneumonia. 186 81
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