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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (
bacterial meningitis
)
4,038
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ampicillin
remains the preferred drug for most cases of
bacterial meningitis
, including those due to Haemophilus influenzae type b. A prospective study was performed comparing high (400 mg/kg per day)- and low (150 mg/kg per day)-dosage regimens of ampicillin in the treatment of 172 patients with
bacterial meningitis
. Response to both regimens was equivalent in terms of average hospital stay, duration of ampicillin therapy, microbiological response, and death and residua. Patients with H. influenzae infections treated with low-dosage regimens had slightly prolonged febrile courses. This study suggests that high-dosage regimens of ampicillin offer no benefit over low-dosage regimens in the treatment of
bacterial meningitis
.
...
PMID:Ampicillin dosage in bacterial meningitis with special reference to Haemophilus influenzae. 31 77
Amoxycillin a new broad spectrum antibiotic has been found to be effective against common gram positive and negative bacteria diagnosed in clinical practice. Moreover, it achieves higher blood levels as compared to
Ampicillin
. Since it was available only for oral use it had not been tried in the treatment of
bacterial meningitis
. Recently Amoxycillin Trihydrate became available for parenteral administration. Here we report its use as a single drug in 11 cases of Pyogenic meningitis. The dose administered by intravenous route was 200-400 mg/kg/day. All the cases recovered. Only three had minor neurological sequelae. Amoxycillin Trihydrate appears to be a safe and effective drug as there were no side effects or toxic manifestation even with the high dosage schedule.
...
PMID:Amoxycillin trihydrate (Ibeamox) in the treatment of pyogenic meningitis-a preliminary report. 41 54
A five day old neonate was diagnosed as having
bacterial meningitis
and commenced on
Ampicillin
and Flucloxacillin. The organism was then found to be Citrobacter koseri and the antibiotics changed to Chloramphenicol systemically for two weeks. The child made an uneventful recovery. At four weeks of age her head circumference had increased unacceptably and a computerised axial tomography scan revealed a large frontal lobe abscess. Aspiration revealed a large pus filled cavity and Citrobacter koseri grown from the pus. The abscess was treated with repeated aspirations, often of 30-40 mls., and installation of Chloramphenicol combined with systemic Chloramphenicol for three weeks. At six months of age her head circumference was within normal limits and the was developmentally normal with no detectable neurological sequelae.
...
PMID:Neonatal meningitis due to Citrobacter koseri. 50 12
Ampicillin
(or penicillin G) plus chloramphenicol, cefuroxime, ceftriaxone, and cefotaxime have been used in the treatment of
bacterial meningitis
beyond the neonatal period. Review of recent data from the USA and Europe indicates that delayed CSF sterilization occurs significantly more often with ampicillin/chloramphenicol and cefuroxime than with ceftriaxone and cefotaxime. Delayed CSF sterilization is associated with an increased morbidity and neurological complications. Previously reported in vitro interactions between chloramphenicol and various beta-lactam antibiotics indicate that for bacteria where chloramphenicol is only bacteriostatic, the combination of chloramphenicol with beta-lactams is antagonistic. Killing rates of various beta-lactams were compared against a number of gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. Cidal activity of some beta-lactams was inoculum dependent. There was a good correlation between in vitro activity and ability to sterilize CSF. Ceftriaxone is highly protein bound and its use in newborns is discouraged. Diarrhea occurs significantly more often after cefriaxone use than after the use of other agents. Ceftriaxone is uniquely associated with a high frequency of biliary pseudolithiasis which may be symptomatic and can cause measureable morbidity. In selecting the "proper" antimicrobial agent for the treatment of
bacterial meningitis
considerations should be given to proven clinical efficacy, prompt CSF sterilization, rapid in vitro cidal activity, safety and cost. We recommend cefotaxime as the agent of choice in the treatment of
bacterial meningitis
.
...
PMID:Delayed cerebrospinal fluid sterilization, in vitro bactericidal activities, and side effects of selected beta-lactams. 209 Dec 55
Antibiotics and improvements in supportive care have greatly reduced the mortality from
bacterial meningitis
. Nevertheless, the incidence of neurodevelopmental sequelae remains unacceptably high.
Ampicillin
and chloramphenicol remain the standard for antimicrobial therapy against which other agents must be compared. A number of adjunct therapies are being investigated for their possible effectiveness in reducing hearing loss and other neurologic effects of this disease. There continues to be a need for carefully performed follow-up studies to assess any possible benefit of these agents. A significant percentage of children surviving an episode of
bacterial meningitis
have obvious or subtle neurodevelopmental deficits. The role of the pediatric neurologist should not end with management of acute problems such as seizures but should be expanded to aid in close developmental monitoring of these high-risk children.
...
PMID:Bacterial meningitis: an update. 221 58
In a multicentre study, 220 consecutive cases of
bacterial meningitis
in children older than 3 months were randomised to treatment with chloramphenicol, ampicillin (initially with chloramphenicol), cefotaxime, or ceftriaxone. The drugs were given in four equal daily doses for 7 days, except ceftriaxone which was given only once daily. 200 cases could be assessed; the causative organisms were Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) in 146; meningococci (Mnc) in 32; pneumococci (Pnc) in 13; and other or unknown in 9. In patients with Hib meningitis, sterilisation of the cerebrospinal fluid occurred most rapidly with ceftriaxone. Otherwise, in terms of overall clinical recovery, normalisation of laboratory indices, clinically significant adverse reactions, toxic effects, sequelae, and mortality rate, the treatment groups were very similar. However, there were 4 bacteriological failures, all in the chloramphenicol group. Also, the treatment was extended or changed in more cases in the chloramphenicol group than in the other groups. Chloramphenicol was thus inferior to the other three antimicrobials.
Ampicillin
is a good and cheap alternative, but there are difficulties with resistance. Easy administration tempts the use of ceftriaxone rather than cefotaxime but it causes diarrhoea. A 7-day course of ampicillin, cefotaxime, or ceftriaxone is sufficient in Hib, Mnc, or Pnc meningitis.
...
PMID:Randomised comparison of chloramphenicol, ampicillin, cefotaxime, and ceftriaxone for childhood bacterial meningitis. Finnish Study Group. 257 Sep 41
An early treatment and an adequate antimicrobial chemotherapy are major prognostic factors for
bacterial meningitis
, brain abscesses and related infections. The necessity of an early therapy requires to begin an empiric antibiotic treatment prior to obtain microbiological results. The principles that apply to empiric therapy of other types of infections are equally applicable to the treatment of central nervous system (CNS) infections and include: the capacity of achieving adequate levels of antibiotic in the CNS and for the brain (pharmacokinetic criteria), the knowledge of the most likely etiologic agents for central nervous system infections and their antibiotic susceptibility (bacteriological criteria). The main clinical types of CNS infection are reviewed for their usual etiologic agents, with a definition of an optimal "bacteriological deal" for each situation. Most studies emphasize the striking differences in the clinical features, etiologic agents and prognosis of spontaneously occurring (primary) meningitis, as opposed to post-traumatic or post-surgical, frequently Gram negative bacillary (secondary) meningitis and other CNS infections (brain abscesses and related infections). These studies, as our experience, suggest that the selection of an empiric therapy must be adapted for each clinical situation.
Ampicillin
still appears to be an ideal agent for empiric therapy for primary meningitis in older children and adults, in whom meningitis are usually caused by N. meningitidis and S. pneumoniae. In younger children (before 6 years), H. influenzae is more often implicated and the occurrence of beta lactamase mediated resistance to ampicillin in as high as 15% of isolates led to use a third generation cephalosporin as an empiric therapy. Neonatal meningitis, meningitis following trauma or surgery, brain abscess, subdural empyema, epidural abscess are caused by various etiologic agents including Streptococcus sp, Staphylococcus sp, Enterobacteriaceae, and for brain infections, anaerobic bacteria. Each situation led to specific recommendations by authors. Finally, miscellaneous aspects of therapy as the usefulness of intrathecal or intraventricular therapy, duration of treatment and place of the neuro-surgery during CNS infections are briefly reviewed.
...
PMID:[Bases of antibiotherapy in neuromeningeal infections]. 328 1
From 1977 to 1981, 18,642 cases of
bacterial meningitis
were reported to the Centers for Disease Control. We analyzed data from 27 states with full participation from 1978 through 1981. Hemophilus influenzae was the most frequent cause of
bacterial meningitis
(48.3%), followed by Neisseria meningitidis (19.6%) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (13.3%). Overall attack rates for males were greater than for females (3.3 v 2.6 cases per 10(5) population per year). Attack rates were highest in children under 1 year of age (76.7 per 10(5) population per year). Case-fatality ratios were highest for gram-negative and miscellaneous causes of
bacterial meningitis
(33.7%) and lowest for meningitis caused by H influenzae (6.0%). Neisseria meningitidis and S pneumonia meningitis occurred preponderantly during the winter, while H influenzae meningitis had peak activity in the spring and fall.
Ampicillin
resistance among H influenzae increased from 18.7% in 1978, to 23.9% in 1981. Serogroup B Neisseria meningitidis was the most common serogroup identified during the reporting period (51.1%), followed by serogroup C (22.3%), serogroup Y (5.8%), and serogroup A (4.7%) infections.
...
PMID:Bacterial meningitis in the United States, 1978 through 1981. The National Bacterial Meningitis Surveillance Study. 387 69
Ampicillin
-cefotaxime was tested as initial therapy of presumptive
bacterial meningitis
in 55 children greater than or equal to 2 months of age at our hospital. During the first year of this ongoing trial, 11 patients, 10 whose CSF yielded ampicillin-resistant Haemophilus influenzae type b (MIC greater than 16 mg/l, beta-lactamase +) and one, indole-negative proteus (MIC 4 mg/l), were begun on ampicillin-cefotaxime and then continued on cefotaxime alone. All did well clinically except one who convulsed briefly but recovered without sequelae. The cefotaxime MICs/MBCs of the beta-lactamase-positive H. influenzae isolates (less than or equal to 0.007 to 0.03/less than or equal to 0.007 to 0.12) and the proteus isolate (0.03/0.12) were significantly lower than chloramphenicol MICs/MBCs (0.25 to 1.0/0.5 to 1.0 and 8/greater than 16). We followed 44 other children with meningitis due to ampicillin-sensitive organisms who were treated with ampicillin or penicillin after 1 or 2 days of ampicillin-cefotaxime. Aetiological agents included ampicillin-sensitive H. influenzae (25), pneumococci (9), meningococci (8), Strept. MG (1) and Listeria monocytogenes (1). 40/44 recovered uneventfully. There were 4 neurological complications: the streptococcal meningitis sustained a brain abscess and the three others were motor incoordination (sensitive haemophilus), hearing loss and subdural effusion (2 pneumococci). There were no deaths. 18/48 children managed initially with ampicillin-chloramphenicol during the same 12-month period one year earlier had significant neurological complications and/or sequelae and there was one death; aetiological agents included sensitive H. influenzae (30), pneumococci (9), ampicillin-resistant haemophilus (5), meningococci (3) and pneumococci plus strept. MG (1). The two groups were comparable except for the number of resistant haemophilus and meningococcal strains and underlying disease more frequent in the ampicillin-cefotaxime group. A significant reduction of neurological morbidity (5/55 or 9.1% vs. 18/48 or 37.5%:P less than 0.001) was therefore associated with the ampicillin-cefotaxime schedule in the initial treatment of proven
bacterial meningitis
. A prolonged hospitalization (greater than 15 days) was less frequent (P less than 0.01) in the ampicillin-cefotaxime group (3/55 or 5.5% vs. 13/48 or 27.1%). The results of the trial to date are considered to be very promising.
...
PMID:A comparison of ampicillin-cefotaxime and ampicillin-chloramphenicol in childhood bacterial meningitis: an experience in 55 patients. 609 37
In a three years retrospective evaluation, the authors point out an important increase of hemophilus influenzae meningitis. This germ, who seem to be actually the first cause in infants
bacterial meningitis
, set the problem of his
Ampicillin
resistance (10-15% of cases). It is therefore necessary to change first treatment of these meningitis. Cefotaxime which has been prescribed to 50% of cases gives satisfactory results.
...
PMID:[Haemophilus influenzae meningitis in infants. Apropos of 22 recent cases]. 610 Feb 6
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