Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0040425 (tonsillitis)
1,594 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two hundred and twenty four hospitalized children in Baghdad aged between 1 month and 10 years were examined for Streptococcal infections. Thirty-four percent of the throat and saliva specimens were positive for beta-hemolytic streptococci. Males were more susceptible to infection with group A streptococci than females. Streptococcus of group A was isolated from 39.5% of the positive cases while group G was 47.4%. The etiological significance of the latter group in tonsillitis and otitis media is to be further investigated. Ninety six percent of the isolated streptococci were T typable and 13.3% of the strains were M typable. A high frequency of type T-11 was found in streptococcal infections. T type 3875 was found to be a new provisional type. All isolates were M untypable, and antiopacity factor negative except for two isolates of T type 4 which were positive in both typings.
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PMID:Identification of beta-hemolytic streptococci isolated from hospitalized children in Baghdad. 39 63

This study tested how general practitioners diagnose streptococcal infection on clinical grounds alone, in patients who presented with sore throats.Four hundred and fifty-two patients were admitted to the study. A clinical diagnosis, prognosis and follow-up was completed in each case and the clinical assessment was checked by throat swabbing at first contact and a week later.The doctors were inaccurate in predicting streptococcal infection, but better than might be expected if prediction were a matter of pure guesswork. Colds and influenza implied negative prediction, tonsillitis a positive prediction, and pharyngitis was doubtful.In this series negative prediction for pharyngitis was 85.2 per cent and positive prediction 31.5 per cent accurate. The equivalent figures for tonsillitis were 61.5 per cent and 38.9 per cent respectively. There was a general tendency to overpredict streptococcal infection which was most marked in acute follicular tonsillitis, but this led to few false negatives. The tendency to overpredict streptococci was most marked when the patient was an adolescent female.There were differences between the urban and rural patterns. During the same period, influenza (and similar illnesses) was recorded less often in the country, whereas urban practitioners were more likely to predict streptococcal infection. Rural practitioners were more accurate in prediction because they were less prone to implicate streptococcal infection than their urban colleagues; there was a higher proportion of cases with proven streptococcal infection in the town and there is a disproportionately high number of adolescent females among the urban patients.
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PMID:Acute sore throat--diagnosis and treatment in general practice. 117 7

Over a period of 9 years in general practice temporary enlargement of the spleen was found in 29 episodes of pharyngitis or tonsillitis, in 2 episodes of acute upper respiratory tract infection other than pharyngitis and in 6 episodes of acute cervical lymphadenitis. In five patients more than one episode of illness associated with splenomegaly was recorded. In 26 of the 37 episodes a possible aetiology was identified. Evidence only of infection with group A streptococci was found in 14 episodes, adenoviruses or coxsackie B viruses were isolated alone in 4 episodes and in 4 episodes the only finding was the presence in the blood of more than occasional atypical mononuclear cells; in 4 episodes there was evidence of both streptococcal and viral infection. Episodes with evidence of streptococcal infection only tended to be of shorter duration and to be more evenly distributed over the year than were episodes without such evidence. Temporary splenomegaly was noted also in two children with varicella (one of whom also had streptococcal infection) and in an adult with probable rubella.
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PMID:Splenomegaly in acute infections due to group A streptococci and viruses. 139 11

The present work deals with trials of the method of rapid diagnosis of streptococcal infection, carried out in children's infectious hospital, with the use of a new diagnostic kit. The proposed diagnosticum has proved to be highly sensitive and specific in scarlet fever and tonsillitis. The sensitivity and specificity of the diagnosticum depend on the duration of the disease, prehospital treatment and the quality of the bacteriological analysis.
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PMID:[The rapid diagnosis of acute streptococcal infection in children]. 148

Inhibitory activity against the proliferation of group A beta-streptococci by alpha-streptococci, part of the normal flora of the oral cavity and throat, plays a role in host defense against infection. We speculated that there might be some relationship between alteration of oral flora and the presence of recurring tonsillitis. Accordingly, 141 cases of tonsillitis have been investigated for the detection of inhibitory alpha-streptococci. In patients scheduled for tonsillectomy, the mean number of inhibitory alpha-streptococci was preoperatively decreased and postoperatively increased. In patients in whom beta-streptococcus had been detected (including patients scheduled for tonsillectomy), the mean number of inhibitory alpha-streptococci was markedly decreased, indicating a high incidence of beta-streptococci in patients with tonsillitis. As inhibitory strains of alpha-streptococcus are sensitive to almost all antibiotics, it is suggested that chemotherapy may disrupt the normal flora of the throat. In summary, investigation of the oral cavity and the throat for the detection of inhibitory alpha-streptococcus appear to be useful in the management of group A beta-streptococcal infection.
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PMID:[Incidence of alpha-streptococcus having inhibitory activity against beta-streptococcus in patients with tonsillitis]. 156 18

Streptococcal infection is a rarely recognized cause of nonrheumatic perimyocarditis. We report a case of a young patient who developed acute perimyocarditis as manifested by diffuse electrocardiogram changes, and markedly elevated cardiac enzymes, concurrently with streptococcal tonsillitis. Despite the dramatic presentation, the patient recovered uneventfully. We conclude that streptococci can involve the heart also directly by a bacterial component or toxin, and not only through a delayed immunologic mechanism as in rheumatic fever. Further studies are necessary to accurately determine the incidence of myocardial involvement during early stages of streptococcal infection.
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PMID:Acute nonrheumatic perimyocarditis complicating streptococcal tonsillitis. 207 Mar 73

Tonsillitis is the most common disease in the otorhinolaryngeal location. For most patients, tonsillitis is attributed to a group A streptococcal infection if the throat culture is positive for that organism or to a viral infection if the throat culture is negative. However, recent studies have shown that Chlamydia trachomatis can produce tonsillar infection. In this study, we evaluated the efficacy of Rokitamycin, a 16-membered ring macrolide antibiotic agent, in the treatment of tonsillitis associated with C. trachomatis. In 26 of 28 (92.9%) patients from whom C. trachomatis was isolated, the organism was eradicated by antimicrobial treatment with Rokitamycin of five days to three weeks' duration. In 25 of the 26 patients, they were totally free of tonsillar symptoms.
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PMID:[Tonsillitis associated with Chlamydia trachomatis and antimicrobial therapy with rokitamycin]. 207 71

The influence of the OF activity of group A streptococci on their specific pathogenic properties has been shown, which is manifested by increased virulence of these streptococci for children of younger age groups and by a two times higher isolation rate of OF+ strains in tonsillitis than in scarlet fever. The possibility of the indirect evaluation of the content of anti-M-antibodies by the results of the anti-OF test has been revealed, which permits using this test instead of the bactericidal test, more complicated, in the study of immunity to infection induced by group A OF+ streptococci. Among the main methods of laboratory support of epidemiological surveillance on streptococcal infection, the introduction of the highly discriminating OF typing and the anti-OF test into practical use is recommended.
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PMID:[The OF characteristics of streptococci group A and immunity to streptococcal infection based on the results of OF and anti-OF tests]. 214 13

This work presents the data on the complex evaluation of the population of group A streptococci, studied at each of four phases (reservation, epidemic transformation, epidemic spread, reservational transformation) of the course of the epidemic process of streptococcal infection of the respiratory tracts (tonsillitis) in an organized group of adults. The characterization of the phases of the infective agent in accordance with the level of the carrier state, the size of streptococcal foci and the virulence of streptococci is given. Thus, the study shows that the heterogeneity of group A streptococci with respect to their virulence reaches its maximum level at the phases of reservation and epidemic spread and its minimum level at the phases of epidemic and reservational transformation. The size of streptococcal foci in carriers and the virulence of streptococci isolated from them are the inter-related unidirectional signs of the population of the infective agent and, at the same time, the main factors responsible for the phase character of the epidemic process and the morbidity level in tonsillitis.
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PMID:[Phase changes in the population of group A streptococci and their influence on the course of the epidemic process of tonsillitis]. 267 40

The new antibiotic, sulbactam/ampicillin (SBT/ABPC) was administered to 25 children. The results obtained are summarized as follows. 1. In 5 cases of children administered with SBT/ABPC (30 mg/kg) by intravenous drip infusion for 30 minutes, the mean values of T 1/2 (beta) were 0.94 hour (SBT) and 0.86 hour (ABPC) and the mean 6.5 hour urinary excretion rates were 64.2% and 42.9%, respectively. 2. The antibiotic was administered to a total of 25 patients with bronchopneumonia, pneumonia, bronchitis, cervical lymphadenitis, tonsillitis, streptococcal infection, urinary tract infection, felon, periappendicular abscess, sepsis or purulent meningitis. Response to the treatment were excellent in 17 cases, good in 7, fair in 1, and poor in none. The efficacy rate was 96%. From our results, this drug appears to be particularly effective against bronchopneumonia, bronchitis and urinary tract infection. 3. Eruption occurred in 1 of 25 patients and elevation of eosinophil, GOT/GPT, platelet in 3 and descent of WBC in 1 were observed, but these were transient. These results showed that SBT/ABPC is a drug which can be safely used in the pediatric field as well as for adults.
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PMID:[Pharmacokinetic and clinical studies on sulbactam/ampicillin in the pediatric field]. 274 48


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