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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cefoxitin, a new cephamycin antibiotic that is active against aerobic and anaerobic bacteria, was studied by 35 investigators in the United States. Of 657 patients eligible for evaluation of efficacy of the compound, 69% were cured and 92% were cured or improved on clinical grounds. Bacteriologic response to therapy with cefoxitin was equally good for infections due to gram-positive cocci (94% cured), gram-negative bacilli (87% cured), and anaerobes (95% cured). Cefoxitin was effective clinically and bacteriologically in the eradication of infections due to organisms resistant to ampicillin, cephalothin, chloramphenicol, tetracycline, and aminoglycosides. Overall rates of favorable response to cefoxitin therapy by disease were: lower respiratory tract infections, 90%; urinary tract infections, 87%; intraabdominal infections, 90%; gynecologic infections, 94%; and septicemia, 84%. Cefoxitin was tolerated well, and major abnormalities of hematologic, hepatic, renal, or central nervous system function were encountered rarely. Resistance to cefoxitin did not develop among gram-negative cocci, anaerobes, or gram-negative bacilli in the medical centers in which the antibiotic was used.
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PMID:Cefoxitin: an overview of clinical studies in the United States. 40 Sep 37

Pseudomembranous enterocolitis is reported in five children. The clinical syndrome, characterized by the acute onset of profuse diarrhea, occurred postoperatively in 2 patients. All the patients had received or were taking antibiotics (penicillin, ampicillin, clindamycin). The disease was severe in 4 persons who presented with hypoproteinemia. Related complications were edema, ascites, pleural effusion, septicemia and/or shock. The diagnosis was made on the basis of typical rectosigmoidoscopic findings. Despite intensive therapy 2 children died. The use of parenteral nutrition is advocated in severe cases with exudative enteropathy. When profuse diarrhea occurs postoperatively or does not rapidly subside with discontinuation of antibiotic therapy, a high index of suspicion should be maintained, even in children, for the possibility of pseudomembranous enterocolitis. An emergency rectosigmoidoscopy should be done in order to make an early diagnosis.
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PMID:Pseudomembranous enterocolitis in childhood. 40 21

The clinical course of 11 patients with neonatal group D streptococcal septicemia is reviewed. Two of the infants died and hydrocephalus developed in one. Group D Streptococcus, both enterococci and nonenterococci, should be considered pathogenic in the neonate until proved otherwise. The antibiotics of choice for treating such infections in the newborn are ampicillin sodium and either kanamycin sulfate or gentamicin sulfate.
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PMID:Group D streptococcal septicemia in the neonate. 43 74

Six children, out of twelve in a neonatal unit suffered from group D salmonellosis. Two patients presented in addition to intestinal manifestations massive extraintestinal symptoms, both with septicemia and meningitis. One patient died on the fourth day from massive disseminated intravascular coagulation and pyocephalus. The other patient had a complete recovery after an antibiotic therapy with chloramphenicol and ampicillin. As the source of infection the mother of case 1 was identified. In her stools salmonella group D were cultured. Cultures of the ward-personals, stool and the food were negative. It should be mentioned that only children fed with artificial food suffered from salmonellosis; whereas children on breastmilk had an unremarkable clinical course and consistantly negative stoolcultures.
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PMID:[Salmonella-meningitis in the newborn (author's transl)]. 46 Feb 61

We have described a case of endocarditis caused by Moraxella nonliquefaciens on a prosthetic Hancock valve, which was cured with a six-week course of ampicillin and gentamicin therapy. Cases of Moraxella septicemia or endocarditis are uncommon, and this apparently represents the first case of Moraxella nonliquefaciens endocarditis on a prosthetic valve. The fastidious growth characteristics of this and similar species may require prolonged incubation of blood cultures and development of different methods for testing the bactericidal activity of the patient's serum.
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PMID:Endocarditis caused by Moraxella nonliquefaciens. 50 92

Six cases of Providencia bacteremia occurring between 1969 and 1978 were reviewed. These cases represented 3% of the gram-negative bacteremias occurring at one hospital. All six cases of Providencia bacteremia were secondary to urinary tract infection with P. stuartii, and in most the infection developed only shortly before the onset of bacteremia; in three cases the bacteremia developed immediately following manipulation of the urinary tract. Patients with long-standing Providencia infections did not acquire bacteremia. The signs and symptoms of Providencia bacteremia were typical of those of septicemia except that vascular collapse was not a prominent feature, occurring in only one patient. The mortality was 33%. All the Providencia strains cultured from the bloodstream were susceptible to gentamicin, although the frequency of gentamicin resistance increased from roughly 10% to 50% during the period studied; the increase in gentamicin use over this period was more gradual. Also noted was a decrease in resistance to ampicillin that paralleled a decrease in ampicillin use. All the Providencia strains were susceptible to amikacin.
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PMID:A review of Providencia bacteremia in a general hospital, with a comment on patterns of antimicrobial sensitivity and use. 51 13

Patients with suspected neonatal septicemia were treated with ampicillin, cloxacillin, and streptomycin. The plasma concentrations of streptomycin were followed. First, the levels were determined during a full dose interval (12 h) in 11 infants. The results were used for development of a routine system for monitoring the plasma levels in all streptomycin treated newborns. This system, the "3-point check", involved blood sampling at 1, 3, and 5 h after administration during every second dose interval. The results of this routine procedure were evaluated both in a retrospective and prospective study. The "3-point check" gave a sufficient description of the total exposure to streptomycin under routine clinical conditions and continuous information to the physician in charge of the patient about the drug level. In 9 cases of 50, the report from the laboratory resulted in dose change for correction of a too low or too high plasma concentration. The dosage used, 7.5 mg streptomycin intramuscularly every 12th hour, appeared to be satisfactory in most patients. Peak values rarely exceeded 30 microgram/ml and were usually lower than 25 microgram/ml. Almost half of the children had plasma levels below 5 microgram/ml at the end of the dose interval (after 12 h). Although the correlation between pharmacokinetics and clinical outcome is difficult to establish in neonatal sepsis, we suggest that our guiding principle to avoid plasma levels above 25 microliter/ml is reasonable. In 35 out of 78 patients an otological examination of the newborns was performed within 13 months after streptomycin treatment and no signs of hearing defects were noted.
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PMID:Pharmacokinetic aspects of streptomycin treatment of neonatal septicemia. 60 24

Broadcillin 'Banyu', which contains an equal amount of ampicillin and oxacillin was given intravenously to children with acute bacterial infections and the following results were obtained. 1. Patients were 55 children with the following bacterial infections; respiratory tract infections (8 cases), pneumonia (34), sepsis (1), meningitis (1), cutaneous and subcutaneous suppurative inflammation (5), osteomyelitis (1), urinary tract infection (2), enteritis (1), and chemoprophylaxis (2). They ranged in age from newborns to 8 year old, but most of them were infants. In the majority of the patients, broadcillin 'Banyu' was administered 50 approximately 150 mg/day in three to four equally divided doses by one shot-injection or by a continuous drip infusion for a period of 2 approximately 10 days. The overall efficacy rate was 88.7% in 53 cases after two cases of chemoprophylaxis were excluded, i.e., excellent in 28, good in 19 and failure in 6: excellent in 4 and good in 4 in 8 cases of respiratory tract infections; excellent in 20, good in 11 and failure in 3 in 34 cases of pneumonia (an efficacy rate 91.2%); failure in sepsis and meningitis: excellent in 2 and good in 3 in 5 cases of cutaneous and subcutaneous suppurative inflammation; excellent in osteomyelitis; excellent in 1 and good in 1 of 2 cases of urinary tract infection; failure in enteritis. 2. Adverse reactions were noted on 10 occasions in 9 cases (16.4%), including 1 case of skin eruption, 1 case of eosinophilia, 5 cases of slight elevation of GOT, 1 case of slight elevation of GPT and 2 cases of slight elevation of BUN. 3. Based on the above results, it was concluded that clinical effect of broadcillin 'Banyu' by an intravenous administration is comparable to its intramuscular route and that safety of intravenous usage seems to be verified as long as the above described dosage is followed.
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation of intravenous administration of ampicillin-oxacillin (Broadcillin 'Banyu') in bacterial infections in children (author's transl)]. 66 Sep 30

Ticarcillin was evaluated in 82 neonates and young infants with suspected sepsis and in 16 older children with chronic Pseudomonas infection of the mastoids. The infants also received kanamycin. Individual ticarcillin doses of 75 or 100 mg/kg were given every four, six, or eight hours by intramuscular injection or by a 30-minute intravenous infusion. Mean plasma concentrations one hour after a dose were from 125 to 189 microgram/ml, depending on dosage, age, and maturity. Mean plasma half-lives were approximately 5 hours in the first week of life, 2 hours in infants from 1 to 8 weeks, and 0.9 hours in older children. Volume of distribution was approximately twice as great in infants as in children, and plasma clearance rates correlated inversely with age. Limited efficacy data suggest that ticarcillin is a suitable alternative to ampicillin or carbenicillin, when given concurrently with an aminoglycoside, for newborn infections. When given for several days before mastoidectomy and tympanoplasty, ticarcillin sterilized the mastoids in the majority of patients. A new dosage schedule for ticarcillin in pediatric patients is proposed.
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PMID:Clinical pharmacology and efficacy of ticarcillin in infants and children. 67 48

A retrospective analysis was undertaken of the records of 107 patients with Crohn's disease of the colon or with ulcerative colitis who underwent 162 operations under steroid cover. The study revealed no correlation between steroid dosage and postoperative morbidity or mortality. The incidence of wound dehiscence and incisional hernia compared favourably with the reports of other unselected series of similar patients. Contamination did significantly influence results. Septic complications were more frequent when the operative field was contaminated and both delayed wound healing and mortality were related to this sepsis. A ;clean and dirty' technique was effective in controlling contamination during elective bowel division but preoperative bowel perforation and accidental entry into the lumen of the bowel during dissection were potentially avoidable sources of contamination. Primary healing of the perineal wound after proctocolectomy was seldom achieved in contaminated patients where a drain tube was brought out through the main perineal incision. When perineal sinuses or fistulae followed a proctocolectomy, patients with Crohn's disease had a significantly slower rate of healing than did patients with ulcerative colitis. However, there was no difference in the healing of abdominal wounds in relation to the primary pathology. Even abdominal incisions which were used on more than one occasion healed as well as those which were used for the first time. A prophylactic antibiotic regime of either ampicillin or tetracycline offered little protection against postoperative sepsis. The organisms which caused such infections were often insensitive to the two antibiotics.
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PMID:Factors which influenced postoperative complications in patients with ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease of the colon on corticosteroids. 68 Jun 5


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