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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Forty-three newborn and young infants including 13 low-birth-weight (LBW) infants were treated with flomoxef (FMOX) and the clinical efficacy and side effect were evaluated. The ages of the patients ranged from 0 to 99 days, and their body weights from 797 to 9,000 g. Dose levels were 10.5 to 48.5 mg/kg every 6 to 8 hours for 3 to 12 days. Those patients who responded to the FMOX treatment included 8 infants with
sepsis
, 14 with suspected
sepsis
, 6 with intrauterine infection, 2 with meningitis, 7 with pneumonia, 1 with staphylococcal scalded skin syndrome, 1 with epididymitis and 4 with urinary tract infections. The results were excellent in 17 and good in 22 patients. The drug was well tolerated, although diarrhea occurred in 2, slightly elevated serum concentrations of transaminases in 2, and eosinophilia and thrombocytosis in 1 patient each. Pharmacokinetic studies on FMOX with 20 mg/kg dose were done in 19 patients including 8 LBW infants. Serum concentrations at 15 minutes after intravenous bolus injection in five 1- to 6-day-old LBW, five 1- to 6-day-old and four 8- to 19-day-old mature infants were 52.6, 52.7 and 58.0 micrograms/ml, respectively, and those at 4 hours were 22.1, 13.3 and 5.2 micrograms/ml, respectively. Serum half-lives of the drug were 3.93, 2.29 and 1.62 hours, respectively, and excretion rates of this drug into urine in the first 6 hours after administration were 30.4, 45.1 and 58.7%, respectively. Mean serum concentrations just after intravenous 1-hour drip infusion in three 8- to 54-day-old LBW and two 8- and 10-day-old mature infants, were 31.5 and 18.9 micrograms/ml, respectively, and those at 4 hours were 15.3 and 4.3 micrograms/ml, respectively. Serum half-lives of the drug were 2.88 and 1.75 hours, respectively, and excretion rates of the drug into urine in the first 6 hours were 22.6 and 47.5%, respectively. The cerebrospinal fluid level at 3 hours after a dose was 7.09 micrograms/ml on the second day of treatment in a patient with
Staphylococcus aureus meningitis
receiving 50 mg/kg of the drug every 6 hours per day. Its level at 1 hour after a dose was 3.52 micrograms/ml on the 8th day of treatment in the same patient. The influence of FMOX on the fecal flora was studied in 7 patients. The characteristic pattern observed during the drug administration was the disappearance of Bifidobacterium, the decrease or disappearance of Enterobacteriaceae and the preservation of Streptococcus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Flomoxef in neonates and young infants; clinical efficacy, pharmacokinetic evaluation and effect on the intestinal bacterial flora]. 178 72
Retrospective study of 14 cases of
Staphylococcus aureus meningitis
and of data from the literature shows that this as yet infrequent disease which carries a high mortality rate (40%) is always related to neurosurgery, primary or iatrogenic
septicemia
, or local infection, usually in the lumbar area (spinal, abscess, spondylitis). The major clinical problem is the search for the meningeal lead point of Staphylococcus aureus penetration, whose eradication is more essential than in usual bacterial meningitis. Prognosis is mainly dependent upon the eventual existence of associated severe
septicemia
. Antibiotics active on Peni-M resistant Staphylococcus aureus and meningeal infection are reviewed.
...
PMID:[Purulent Staphylococcus aureus meningitis]. 631 57
The records of all patients with
Staphylococcus aureus meningitis
admitted to Vancouver General Hospital between 1956 and 1981 were reviewed. All the patients had clinical and laboratory features of meningitis, and in all cases S. aureus was isolated from the cerebrospinal fluid. S. aureus was responsible for 21 (3%) of the 710 cases of acute bacterial meningitis. Therapy with cloxacillin or methicillin, or both, with or without other agents, was successful in 14 of the 21 patients. Three of the 14 patients without ventricular shunts died, 2 with fulminating
septicemia
and 1 with a postoperative brain abscess treated with cloxacillin. Following shunt removal and antibiotic therapy all seven patients with ventricular shunts survived the infection. Shunt removal may therefore be essential in appropriate cases.
...
PMID:Staphylococcus aureus meningitis: 26 years' experience at Vancouver General Hospital. 685 Apr 67
A case of
Staphylococcus aureus meningitis
(
SAM
) secondary to endocarditis is presented. The presence of a petechial rash affecting the lower limbs led to an initial presumptive diagnosis of meningococcal meningitis. There were no stigmata of endocarditis at presentation, though these subsequently developed. Underlying endocarditis should be diligently sought in any patient presenting with spontaneous
SAM
, even if typical stigmata are initially absent. In view of the association with skin lesions and neurological complications, S. aureus endocarditis may mimic the classical presentation of meningococcal
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis presenting as meningitis and mimicking meningococcal sepsis. 1056 77