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Query: UMLS:C0085593 (chills)
4,268 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Melioidosis is a rare but potentially fatal infectious disease in Taiwan, although it has been endemic in Southeast Asia, especially northeast Thailand, and northern Australia. In this article, we report a male diabetes with fulminant pneumonia, and septicemia caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei without traveling abroad before this episode. Productive cough and intermittent chills, high fever for one week, followed by progressively deteriorating dyspnea, shock, disturbed consciousness status were the major presentations. Blood culture grew B. pseudomallei on the fifth admission day. Unfortunately, the patient died on the 9th admission day, despite intensive care and the broad-spectrum antimicrobial regimen used.
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PMID:An indigenous melioidosis: a case report. 1037 72

A 34-year-old woman presented two weeks after a visit to Burma with fever peaking up to 39 degrees C, chills, non-productive cough, headache, muscle pain, shortness of breath and a painful swelling on the left lower leg. She was treated immediately with intravenous amoxycillin-clavulanic acid. The Gram negative causative agent of melioidosis, Burkholderia (previously Pseudomonas) pseudomallei, was cultured from samples taken beforehand. The patient then received ceftazidime. She recovered. In view of the risk of relapse she was treated with amoxycillin-clavulanic acid for a further six months. Melioidosis is endemic in Southeast Asia and Northern Australia. It is rarely seen outside these areas. The clinical spectrum of the disease is wide and varies from fulminating sepsis to a subclinical disease and may affect any organ system, usually the lungs. The mortality of the septicaemic form after adequate treatment is 40%. Surviving patients have a high relapse rate (4-20%). Melioidosis can become chronic with formation of abscesses or can remain subclinical for many years, probably because the microorganism can survive within phagocytic cells with a risk of reactivation at moments of immunosuppression. The optimal treatment consists of ceftazidime intravenously for at least two weeks followed by an eradication phase consisting of oral antibiotics for at least 3 months.
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PMID:[Melioidosis]. 1198 Mar 74

Splenic abscesses caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei are rarely reported in Taiwan. Here we report a middle-aged man who presented with fever, chills, and general malaise for several days. Abdominal echo revealed isolated splenic abscesses and he received antibiotics treatment according to the initial blood culture result, Serratia marcescens. However, fever did not subside. Then he was referred to our hospital and meropenem was prescribed. Fever subsided 5 days after the beginning of meropenem administration. Repeated fine-needle aspiration of splenic abscesses drained out the pus, which was cultured as B. pseudomallei. He was finally diagnosed as a case of melioidosis based on microbiological evidence. Physicians must take melioidosis into consideration when splenic abscesses are encountered clinically.
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PMID:Melioidosis presenting with isolated splenic abscesses: a case report. 1766 9