Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038002 (splenomegaly)
9,873 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In South Vietnam, the first Salmonella typhi resistant to chloramphenicol were isolated at the end of 1971; this resistance spread rapidly to two-thirds of S. typhi isolated; it is due to resistance plasmids which parasite most strains of S. typhi identified in Vietnam. The typhoid endemy turned into an epidemic en 1972. The clinical symptoms of typhoid fever remained just as few as before: often only a high temperature; splenomegaly is rare, hepatomegaly more frequent. Complications, specially associated ones, have been more frequently observed since 1972; the evolution of the disease is slower. Although costly, a high dose of ampicillin often proves clinically active. For the moment, an association of trimethoprime and sulfamethoxazole remains the least expensive of efficient treatments.
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PMID:[Typhoid fever in south Vietnam to day (author's transl)]. 104 59

Of 103 cases of typhoid fever admitted to the Pediatric Wing of our hospital during the months of August 1989 to April 1990, 82.5% were resistant to chloramphenicol, ampicillin and co-trimoxozole. Nearly 87% children were in the age group of 3-10 years. Fever was present in all and splenomegaly in 90.2% cases. Urinary retention during the course of illness was present in 2 cases. The positivity rate of blood culture, bone marrow culture and Widal test was 83.7, 100 and 13.5%, respectively. Majority of the strains were of Phage 51-Type I. For the treatment of multidrug resistant cases gentamicin and furazolidine proved ineffective. Ciprofloxacin was tried in 85 cases and was found to be effective in all cases with no side effects.
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PMID:Multidrug resistant typhoid fever: study of an outbreak in Calcutta. 160 98

The medical records of 370 patients treated for typhoid fever between 1986 and 1988 at the Communicable Disease Centre, Singapore, were reviewed. The disease was generally mild. There was no mortality. Fever was found in 98.4% of patients on admission and diarrhoea in 21%. Cough was predominantly a symptom of children and occurred in 7.1% of patients aged below 15 years. Other symptoms were uncommon. Hepatomegaly was found in 71% and splenomegaly in 47%. Leucopenia was not a helpful diagnostic marker. Chloramphenicol was the drug of choice. The relapse rate was 5.4% and the convalescent and temporary carrier rates 11.6%. The risk of developing the carrier state was significantly higher among patients who were afebrile on admission compared with those who were febrile (P less than 0.001); it was also higher in patients treated with ampicillin as compared to those treated with chloramphenicol (P less than 0.001, chi 2 = 22.7, odds ratio = 5.25, 95% confidence limits: 2.46 and 11.29). The role of ampicillin as a first line treatment for acute typhoid fever may need further re-evaluation.
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PMID:Typhoid fever in Singapore: a review of 370 cases. 194 16

Listeria monocytogenes can cause sepsis and meningitis during the neonatal period. Six cases of early onset neonatal sepsis caused by Listeria monocytogenes are reported here. These cases were diagnosed in a private hospital at Santiago, Chile from December 1984 throughout November 1986. The incidence rate was 1.4 x 1,000 liveborns. Clinical findings included prematurity (6), meconium stained amniotic fluid (6), hepatomegaly (6), splenomegaly (6), maculopapular exanthem (4), anal prolapse (3) and meningitis (1). Additionally 5 patients developed respiratory distress and 4 required ventilatory support. Overall mortality was 50% (3/6). All deaths were related to respiratory failure and occurred during the first week of disease. All patients received ampicillin and amikacin early in the course of their infection. Listeriosis of the newborn infant might be preventable by prompt recognition and treatment of maternal infections. Since Listeria infection in pregnancy is usually mild and symptoms and signs are nonspecific, prevention may be difficult. Pregnant women with fever of no clear origin or with an influenza like syndrome should be screened for listeriosis with cultures from blood, vagina and cervix samples.
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PMID:[Early onset neonatal septicemia caused by Listeria monocytogenes]. 215 19

Microbiological features, diagnostic investigations, treatment, and complication rate in 53 cases of infective endocarditis were reviewed in this study. Infection occurred both on prosthetic (47%) and native valves (38%), while in 15% of the cases no prior valvular disease was known. Streptococcal (38%) and staphylococcal (30%) infections were predominant. In 17% of the cases apparent negative blood cultures were obtained. The most frequent portal of entry was dental infection or manipulation (45%), however in 28% of the patients etiology remained obscure. Major clinical signs and symptoms included heart murmurs (96%), fever (91%), dyspnoea (32%), and splenomegaly (30%). Echocardiography revealed vegetations in 78%, aortic and mitral valve being nearly equally affected. All patients were medically treated and 53% received antibiotics prior to blood cultures. Associations of ampicillin or penicillin with an aminoglycoside (43%) and penicillinase-resistant antibiotics (30%) were most frequently administered. In 28% of the patients, it was necessary to insert a prosthetic (aortic or mitral) valve. During follow-up, heart failure (28%), embolization (11%), and infections (11%) were the major complications.
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PMID:A six years review on 53 cases of infective endocarditis: clinical, microbiological and therapeutical features. 325 78

Fever was a constant feature in 28 subjects with spontaneous mononucleosis due to cytomegalovirus and lasted 15 days or more in almost all cases (26/28). Blood mononucleosis and biochemical hepatic disorders were virtually always present but appeared later, so that the fever was initially thought to be "isolated". Splenomegaly was found in 39.3 p. cent of the cases. Skin rashes developed in 5 patients who had received ampicillin. Non-specific immunological abnormalities were detected in 8 of the 13 patients in whom they were looked for. The diagnosis was established by serological tests, which showed either a significant rise in, or (in patients seen at a late stage of the disease) high, sustained antibodies titers. The virus was found in blood in seven patients among the fourteen in whom it was looked for. We believe that these findings in otherwise healthy subjects could be termed "primary infection". The condition invariably followed a favourable course in the absence of any treatment. Contrary to what is observed in infectious mononucleosis, there was no sore throat and the Paul-Bunnel Davidsohn test always gave negative results.
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PMID:[Spontaneous mononucleosis due to cytomegalovirus in otherwise healthy subjects. Prospective study of 28 cases (author's transl)]. 625 32

Enteric fever is still a common health problem in many countries, especially in children. Thus a ten-year retrospective study was carried out to evaluate the clinical and laboratory properties of enteric fever and the incidence of antimicrobial resistance in children. Throughout the past 10 years, Salmonella was isolated in 105 patients by blood culturing, 27 of which were Salmonella typhi. Most of the patients were above the age of two. Besides the typical symptoms and signs of enteric fever, 29.2% of the patients had some neurologic findings. Besides, 68.5% had elevated liver enzymes while only 44.4% had hepatomegaly with or without splenomegaly. Anemia was present in 44%, leukopenia in 16% and leukocytosis in 11.1% of the cases. The emergence of antimicrobial resistance during the last five years against ampicillin, chloramphenicol and trimetoprim-sulfamethoxazole has created a challenge in treating these infections.
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PMID:Salmonella typhi infections. A 10-year retrospective study. 870

Patients with typhoid fever presenting to the Tokyo Metropolitan Komagome Hospital during the period 1975-1998 were retrospectively investigated. All cases were diagnosed by a positive culture for Salmonella typhi in either of their clinical specimens. Of the total number of 130 patients, 57% contracted the disease abroad; this population increased in later years as the total numbers of cases decreased. The period from disease onset to diagnosis averaged 14 days with 20% of the cases requiring over three weeks to establish a diagnosis. As for symptomatology relative bradycardia was seen in less than half of the cases, and rose spots or splenomegaly in less than one third. A positive blood culture was the most frequent test establishing the diagnosis followed by a positive stool culture. Intestinal bleeding was recognized in as many as 35 cases (27%) and even intestinal perforation occurred in two cases (1.5%). Chloramphenicol was most commonly employed during the early study period, however, during the late period it was replaced by fluoroquinolones. The clinical cure rate was 98% with regimens that include fluoroquinolones/quinolone; however it was 87% with the other antimicrobial regimens. Bacteriological relapse occurred in 25% of the non-fluoroquinolone group while only in 2.0% in the fluoroquinolone/quinolone group. Four strains of Salmonella typhi that were multi-resistant to chloramphenicol, ampicillin and cotrimoxazole were isolated in travelers from Asia. Early diagnosis by appropriate bacteriological examination regardless of classical symptomatology should be stressed and the use of fluoroquinolones is warranted in the treatment of typhoid fever.
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PMID:Clinical and bacteriological profiles of patients with typhoid fever treated during 1975-1998 in the Tokyo Metropolitan Komagome Hospital. 1098 30

A prospective study of 102 children with bacteriologically confirmed typhoid fever, admitted to Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia over 5 years was conducted. The average age at presentation was 91.3 (range 6 - 159) months. Fever (900%), abdominal pain (56%) and diarrhoea (44%) were common symptoms. Findings included: hepatomegaly (85.3%), splenomegaly (27.5%), anaemia (31%), leukopenia (15%). thrombocytopenia (26%), positive Widal (62.5%) and Typhidot test (96%). Patients were treated with ampicillin (n = 54) or chloramphenicol (n = 49) and 1/3 developed complications like hepatitis (n = 19), bone marrow suppression (n = 8) and paralytic ileus (n = 7). A patient with splenomegaly, thrombocytopenia or leukopenia was at higher risk of developing complications.
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PMID:Typhoid fever in Malaysian children. 1201 69

To find the incidence, markers and nature of complications of typhoid fever, we studied 102 children with cultures positive for Salmonella typhi in a cross-sectional study, prospectively, over a period of almost 5 years. All isolates were sensitive to commonly used antibiotics. One third of these children developed complications which included: anicteric hepatitis, bone marrow suppression, paralytic ileus, myocarditis, psychosis, cholecystitis, osteomyelitis, peritonitis, pneumonia, haemolysis, and syndrome of inappropriate release of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH). Twelve children developed multiple complications. If hepatitis is excluded from the complications, the rate of complications in bacteriologically confirmed cases of typhoid fever drops to 11 per cent. These complications were not related to: the age or sex of patients, duration of illness before admission, use of antibiotics before admission, nutritional status, level of 'O' or 'H' titre, presence of IgM or IgG antibodies, or treatment with chloramphenicol or ampicillin. Children with splenomegaly, thrombocytopenia or leukopenia were more likely to develop complications.
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PMID:Complications of bacteriologically confirmed typhoid fever in children. 1202 23


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