Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pharmacokinetic, bacteriological and clinical studies on meropenem (MEPM) were performed in children. The results are summarized as follows: 1. A total of 16 patients was treated with MEPM. Each dose was 20 mg/kg, and administration was made 3 times daily using 30-minute intravenous drip infusion for 5-28 days. Clinical efficacies of MEPM in 16 patients with bacterial infections (1 with purulent meningitis, 1 with suspected subdural abscess, 2 with suspected sepsis, 4 with pneumonia, 1 with acute maxillar sinusitis, 2 with cervical abscess, 1 with acute gastroenteritis, 2 with skin soft tissue infection and 2 with urinary tract infection) were evaluated as excellent in 7 patients, good in 8 patients and fair in 1 patient with an efficacy rate of 93.8%. Fourteen causative organisms found in 11 patients (Streptococcus pneumoniae in 4, Branhamella catarrhalis in 3, Staphylococcus aureus in 3, Group B Streptococcus in 1, Escherichia coli in 3) were all eradicated. No adverse reactions were observed in any of the 16 patients. 2. MICs of MEPM against 6 clinically isolated bacteria (B. catarrhalis 2, S. pneumoniae 3 and S. aureus 1) from children with bacterial infections were examined. MEPM showed good antibacterial activities. 3. Pharmacokinetic studies: Peak plasma concentrations of MEPM averaged 43.07 micrograms/ml (37.20-46.30 micrograms/ml) at dose of 20 mg/kg administered by 30-minute drip infusion. In the first 8 hours after administration, the urinary excretion rates of MEPM averaged 39.9% of the administered dose.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Pharmacokinetic, bacteriological and clinical studies on meropenem in children]. 152 74

A case of emphysematous pyelonephritis with disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) is presented. A 54-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of unclear consciousness and extremely high blood glucose level. The laboratory data suggested uncontrolled diabetes mellitus (DM) and urinary tract infection with sepsis and DIC. The plain abdominal X-P and abdominal CT revealed the existence of gas in the right renal parenchyma, perinephric tissue and the upper part of the right ureter. Right nephrectomy was performed after the improvement of the patient's condition by the echo-guided drainage of the right kidney and the treatment for infection, DM and DIC. We reviewed 71 cases of emphysematous pyelonephritis in the Japanese literature and the choice of treatment was discussed.
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PMID:[A case of emphysematous pyelonephritis with disseminated intravascular coagulation]. 154 72

Two hundred and seventy-six hospitalized patients with severe infection (complicated UTI, pneumonia, skin and soft tissue infection or septicaemia) were randomly allocated to receive either 1g or 2g cefpirome bd. Two hundred and seventy-four patients were evaluable for tolerance, 210 for bacteriological efficacy. The two groups were similar in terms of underlying disease, age, sex, and general condition on admission. The overall clinical and bacteriological response rates were 97/103 (94%) and 68/76 (90%) respectively in the 1g group, compared with 102/107 (95%) and 67/71 (94%) in the 2g group. There was no significant difference between the treatment groups. Eighteen adverse events, possibly or probably drug related, were reported (7 in the 1g group, 11 in the 2g group). This resulted in discontinuation of therapy in four cases (two in each group). Fourteen of the adverse events were local (five receiving 1g, nine receiving 2g), mainly phlebitis or pain at the injection site. Thirteen patients died during the study period (up to 14 days after the last dose) but in no case was death attributed to cefpirome. A review of routine laboratory parameters revealed no abnormalities which could definitely be attributed to cefpirome although in four cases a relationship was considered possible; these included two increases in serum creatinine, one increase in SGPT, and one episode of neutropenia. Cefpirome administered as 1 or 2g twice daily was a well tolerated, effective agent for the treatment of severe sepsis in hospitalized patients.
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PMID:Prospective randomized phase II study of intravenous cefpirome 1g or 2g bd in the treatment of hospitalized patients with different infections. Cefpirome Study Group. 160 64

During the last few years, among nosocomial pathogens, Acinetobacter spp. have given rise to an increasing number of nosocomial infections. Acinetobacter strains are widely distributed in nature; in hospitals, the human skin is the likely source for most outbreaks of hospital infections. The organism has been frequently found in the inanimate environment, especially in moist situations and it has been isolated from various types of opportunistic infections (septicaemia, endocarditis, meningitis, pneumonia, skin and wound sepsis and urinary tract infection). For epidemiological studies, various typing methods such as biotyping, bacteriocin typing and serology have been developed. More recently electrophoretic patterns of cell-envelope proteins and plasmid analysis have proved useful in differentiating outbreak strains. Antibiogram typing may be useful but the antibiotic resistance of Acinetobacter spp. has changed rapidly within the last few years and thus antibiotyping must be complemented by other typing systems. New methods such as electrophoretic analysis of isoenzymes, definition of plasmidotype profiles or restriction endonuclease digestion of chromosomal DNA are under investigation.
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PMID:Hospital infection with Acinetobacter spp.: an increasing problem. 167 90

One hundred and ninety-three nephrotic children with a total of 271 admissions during the past decade, from 1980 to 1989, were retrospectively reviewed for acute complications and unusual features of nephrotic syndrome. One hundred and forty-nine patients were male, 44 female. Hypertension was found in 41 children (21.2%). Nine patients (4.7%) had a total of 11 episodes of hypovolemic shock. These shock patients had a more severe hemoconcentration (mean hemoglobin concentration 19.6 +/- 1.5 g/dl) and hyponatremia (mean serum sodium 127.5 +/- 8.5 mmole/L). Bacterial infections occurred in 28 children (14.5%) with primary peritonitis in 13, sepsis in 6, cellulitis in 4, urinary tract infection in 4 and osteomyelitis in 1. Almost all infections were caused by gram-negative bacilli. Other complications or features included tetany in 4 (2.1%), thromboembolism in 2 (1.0%), pancreatitis in one (0.5%) and Fanconi syndrome in one (0.5%).
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PMID:Complications of nephrotic syndrome in children. 168 Oct 1

Despite significant advances in obstetric and pediatric health care, group B beta-hemolytic Streptococcus (GBS) remains one of the most prevalent and devastating pathogens in peripartum women and their newborn infants. It may cause urinary tract infection, chorioamnionitis and endometritis, bacteremia, and cesarean wound infection in the peripartum period. Moreover, GBS accounts for nearly 50% of serious neonatal bacterial infections. Approximately three in every 1,000 children born in the United States acquire pneumonia, sepsis, or meningitis from GBS, with combined mortality and morbidity exceeding 50% despite appropriate antibiotic and supportive therapy. Estimates indicate that more than 10,000 infants are affected annually, at a cost of more than $300 million. Neonatal disease is divided into early- and late-onset syndromes: The illness emerging after six days of age differs in terms of GBS serotype, clinical manifestations, and outcome from the disseminated process seen in earlier onset. We describe two infants infected with GBS and discuss risk factors, pathogenesis, diagnosis, therapy, and options for disease prevention in the peripartum woman and her infant.
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PMID:Group B streptococcus infection in mother and child. 174 82

Factors associated with mortality were examined for 27,370 hip fracture patients aged 65 years or older in Maryland hospitals, using discharge data for 1979-1988. Variables of interest included sociodemography, principal medical and injury diagnoses, E-code, year, disposition, and hospital. For both white males and white females, the hip fracture rate doubled with each 5-year increment in age. The overall proportion who died during hospitalization was 4.9% (n = 1,339). After multivariate adjustment, there remained a substantially increased risk of death for males. The relative odds (RO) of dying for males versus females were 1.6. Other factors associated with high relative odds of dying during hospitalization included the diagnosis of septicemia (RO = 12.3), pneumonia/influenza (RO = 4.9), and digestive system disorder (RO = 3.6). The RO of dying doubled in the presence of cardiac, neoplastic, or cerebrovascular disease. Patients with diagnoses of nervous system or mental disorder, hypertension, anemia, musculoskeletal system disease, or urinary tract infection were at decreased risk of dying. Results of the study suggest that the prevention or early diagnosis and treatment of serious infections in the elderly patient with a hip fracture remain an important challenge to clinicians.
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PMID:Hip fractures among the elderly: factors associated with in-hospital mortality. 174 23

Risk factors, clinical syndromes and the case-fatality rates associated with Group B Streptococcus (GBS) infections in infants managed at the University of Rochester Medical Center during 1979 to 1989 were reviewed. Overall 92 episodes of early onset disease (EOD) and 54 of late onset disease (LOD) were diagnosed in 143 infants (3 infants with EOD presented later with LOD). About one-third of patients with EOD and controls were non-white compared with two-thirds of patients with LOD that occurred in racial minority groups. Prematurity and low birth weight were significantly more common in patients with invasive GBS disease than in controls. Eighty-three of 92 (90%) cases of EOD were detected during the first day of life and 10 of 54 (19%) cases of LOD occurred in infants older than 3 months of age. At the time of diagnosis 4% of infants with EOD were asymptomatic, 54% had respiratory disease, 27% had sepsis without a focus, 15% had meningitis and 1% had urinary tract infection or omphalitis. Among infants with LOD 46% had sepsis, 37% meningitis, 7% urinary tract infection, 6% osteomyelitis and/or septic arthritis and 4% cellulitis or pneumonia. Leukopenia and shift to the left were observed in 43 and 61% of episodes of EOD and in 28 and 57% of episodes of LOD, respectively. All infants were promptly treated with antibiotics and vigorous supportive therapy. The case-fatality rate was 13% in EOD and 0 in LOD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The changing spectrum of group B streptococcal disease in infants: an eleven-year experience in a tertiary care hospital. 174 91

Strictly enforced antibiotic formulary restriction in combination with formulation of agreed guidelines for antibiotic use in common infection problems such as septicemia, febrile neutropenia, urinary tract infection, biliary sepsis, liver abscess, peritonitis, nosocomial pneumonia, soft tissue infection and purulent meningitis, generated a combined savings of 307,748.5 bahts or 13.5 per cent cost reduction over a 6 month period, and improved quality of use, appropriate 54.8 vs 67.5 per cent, statistically significance (P less than 0.002). Although this saving was offset in part by increased spending of unrestricted antibiotics, such as Penicillin and Gentamicin, an overall cost saving remained. In the months during the restrictions, no significant changes occurred regarding patients response and mortality. However, after the onset of the controls, it was revealed that antibiotics were more appropriately used afterwards. This study has shown, most importantly, that savings were achieved with no negative effect on good patient care. Moreover, the antibiotic use control was operationally successful, most house-staff and attending physicians, not only antibiotic evaluating team, have accepted the program in a very positive way. Overall, this program successfully achieved its initial goal, cost saving without compromising good medical practice. We are now continuing our program and also trying to modify so that it will be useful to all departments in the hospital.
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PMID:Effect of a selective restriction policy on antibiotic expenditure and use: an institutional model. 176 42

To evaluate pharmacokinetics and clinical efficacy of flomoxef (6315-S, FMOX) in neonates, FMOX was administered to 21 neonates. With 20 mg/kg and 40 mg/kg of intravenous drip-infusion of FMOX 60 minutes, half lives (T 1/2's) was 64.9 minutes and 130.3 minutes, respectively, and when 20 mg/kg of FMOX was infused intravenously to 2 cases, half lives were 70.8 minutes and 110.1 minutes, respectively. When 45-100 mg/kg of FMOX was administered to 17 neonates with infections (pneumonia 8, sepsis 1, sepsis suspected 2, intrauterine infection 2, urinary tract infection 2, omphalitis 2), the efficacy rate was 88.2% (15 of 17). No adverse reactions were observed clinically in the 21 neonates. Transient elevation of eosinophilia was observed in 1 case and transient elevation of S-GOT and S-GPT 1 in another. These results suggest that FMOX is an effective and safe antibiotic to use in neonates.
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PMID:[Pharmacokinetic and clinical evaluations of flomoxef in neonates]. 178 76


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