Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0085437 (bacterial meningitis)
4,038 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-four infants under 6 months infected with echovirus 19 are described, They were the youngest of the many children admitted to hospitals in Newcastle and Gateshead during an epidemic in the north-east of England in 1974. Generally, the younger the child the more severe the illness, which affected the upper respiratory tract, the gut, the skin, and the meninges, and sometimes caused as state of collapse resembling septicaemic shock. Polymorphonuclear pleocystosis of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) sometimes suggested bacterial meningitis, so that antibiotics were given in 38% of cases. The virus was recovered with a high success rate from nasopharyngeal secretions, CSF, and stool.
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PMID:Echovirus 19 infection in infants under six months. 96 74

Overwhelming infections caused by encapsulated bacteria, salmonella spp. and Plasmodium falciparum (in malarious areas) are an important cause of morbidity and death in patients with sickle cell disease. Bacterial infections afflicting these patients include fulminant meningitis and septicaemia caused by Str. pneumoniae and H. influenzae type b, and non-typhoid salmonellosis. Children less than five years of age are at greatest risk for meningitis and septicaemia, while salmonella osteomyelitis is probably common to all age groups. The most important contributing factors to this increased susceptibility to encapsulated bacteria are: a state of functional asplenia, an opsonophagocytic defect due to an abnormality of the alternative complement pathway, and a deficiency of specific circulating antibodies. Devitalisation of gut and bone due to repetitive vaso-occlusive crises, saturation of the macrophage system with red cell breakdown products of chronic haemolysis, and underlying splenic and hepatic dysfunction all predispose to salmonella infections. Seventy per cent of septicaemias and meningitis among under-fives with sickle cell disease is caused by Str. pneumoniae. Septicaemia frequently presents with sudden fever, few prodromal features, and a deceptive appearance of well-being, followed within hours by rapid relentless progression to shock and death. Adrenal haemorrhage is common, and mortality can be as high as 50 per cent, unless intravenous antibiotic, with or without steroid therapy, is promptly initiated. The clinical presentation of bacterial meningitis, its management and mortality follow the normal patterns, but recurrent meningitis and cerebrovascular morbidity are common in patients with sickle cell disease. An acute pulmonary involvement, indistinguishable from bacterial pneumonia (the 'chest syndrome') is the commonest single complication of sickle cell disease at any age. Str. pneumoniae is responsible for about half of the episodes. The protective values of the pneumococcal vaccine and long-term penicillin prophylaxis remain to be established in sickle cell disease. Over 70 per cent of haematogenous osteomyelitis in sickle cell disease is caused by salmonellae. The distinction from vaso-occlusive bone crisis is often difficult, but the presence of multiple, often symmetrical bone involvement, diaphyseal fissuring and involucrum should suggest osteomyelitis rather than bone infarction. Chloramphenicol remains the drug of choice and often has to be given in high doses for up to six weeks. The role of surgery is limited by the presence of multiple bone involvement and the known anaesthetic risks in this group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Sickle cell disease and infection. 631 9

Forty-three children (ten neonates, 15 infants and 18 older children) were treated with single daily doses of ceftriaxone (50 to 100 mg/kg) intravenously or intramuscularly for serious bacterial infections. The infections included meningitis (31 patients), brain abscesses (four patients), septicaemia (three patients), pleuro-pneumonia (two patients), septic arthritis and soft tissue phlegmona (three patients). No other antibacterial agents were used except in four patients with brain abscesses, in whom ceftriaxone was combined with ornidazole. The overall bacteriological cure rate was 98%, and sterilisation of the cerebrospinal fluid occurred in 27 of 28 patients (96%) with proven bacterial meningitis. Two patients died, three survived with severe neurological sequelae; one neonate required partial gut resection. A complete clinical cure was achieved in the remaining 37 patients. Only one treatment failure was directly related to the drug therapy. The only side effect noted were sterilisation of the gut with overgrowth of Candida albicans in 35% of neonates and infants, an prolonged fever in 13% of all patients. Ceftriaxone given in a 24-hourly regimen is convenient and highly effective in serious bacterial infections in children and is without significant toxicity.
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PMID:Once-daily administration of ceftriaxone in the treatment of meningitis and other serious infections in children. 631 28