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Query: UMLS:C0149514 (
bronchitis
)
6,902
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ceftazidime ( CAZ ), a new injectable cephem antibiotic, was used for treatment of infections in children, and the following results were obtained. After an intravenous injection of CAZ at a dose of 20 mg/kg, the mean blood levels in 2 patients were 41.5 micrograms/ml at 30 minutes, 18.1 micrograms/ml at 2 hours and 2.55 micrograms/ml at 6 hours, with the half-life (T 1/2) of 1.37 hours. In a 22-day-old baby with
meningitis
given CAZ intravenously at a dose of 43.5 mg/kg, the blood levels were 100 micrograms/ml at 30 minutes, 68 micrograms/ml at 2 hours and 25 micrograms/ml at 6 hours, with the half-life (T 1/2) of 2.96 hours. After intravenous administration of CAZ in doses ranging from 35.7 to 50 mg/kg, CSF concentrations ranged from N.D. to 6.3 micrograms/ml in 3 patients with purulent
meningitis
, although 19 micrograms/ml at 1 hour and 13 micrograms/ml at 2 hours in 1 patient after intravenous administration of 46.7 mg/kg. In patient with mumps meningitis, CSF concentrations were undetectable after intravenous administration of 35.7 mg/kg. Seventeen patients (each 1 patient with lymphadenitis, tonsillitis and septicemia, each 2 patients with pneumonia, bronchiectatic
bronchitis
, pyothorax and purulent
meningitis
, each 3 patients with pyelonephritis and enteritis) were treated with CAZ intravenously, at the daily doses of 178.2 mg/kg and 200 mg/kg in 4 divided doses in patients with
meningitis
and 44.1 to 103.4 mg/kg in 3 divided doses in patients with other infections (two of them were given by intravenous drip infusion for 30 minutes). The clinical responses were excellent or good in all the patients except for 1 case of Salmonella enteritis (poor) and 1 case of Campylobacter enteritis (poor). The efficacy rate was 88.2%. It was noteworthy that the clinical response was excellent in 1 case of septicemia with P. aeruginosa with leukemic stage of malignant lymphoma and in 2 cases of purulent
meningitis
. As side effects, fever, eruption, leukocytopenia, elevation in GOT and positive CRP considered to be allergic, were observed on day 16 of administration in 1 case of pyothorax. These symptoms disappeared by discontinuance of administration. In addition, there were elevation in GOT and GPT in 2 cases and elevation in GOT in 2 cases and elevation in GPT in 1 case; they were all mild or transient, and there was nothing to be worried about.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Clinical evaluation of ceftazidime in paediatrics]. 637 60
Ceftazidime ( CAZ ), a newly-developed parenteral cephem antibiotic, was administered to 8 children; by one shot intravenous (i.v.) injection in the doses of 20 and 40 mg/kg each to 2 children, and by 30 minutes' i.v. drip infusion in the doses of 10 and 20 mg/kg each to 2 children, and the serum levels, urinary levels and recovery rates were determined. CAZ was also administered to 2 patients with purulent
meningitis
, one complicated with subdural abscess and the other with bacteremia, in the doses of 19.2 and 50.7 mg/kg, respectively, by one shot i.v. injection, and the CSF level of CAZ was determined. In addition, CAZ was administered to 2 children with
acute bronchitis
, 1 with chronic bronchitis, 37 with pneumonia, 3 with pleuropneumonia, 1 each for purulent
meningitis
, purulent
meningitis
accompanied with subdural abscess and purulent
meningitis
with bacteremia, 5 with urinary tract infections and 3 with purulent lymphadenitis (total 54 children), in the mean dose of 85.8 mg/kg/day mostly in 4 divided doses by one shot i.v. injection for 9 days on the average, and clinical effectiveness and bacteriological response were evaluated in these cases, and adverse events and abnormal laboratory findings were examined in the 66 cases which included 12 drop-out cases. 1. After the administration of CAZ to 4 children; 20 and 40 mg/kg each to 2 children, by one shot i.v. injection, the mean serum levels got to the peak of 115.8 and 199.5 mcg/ml, respectively, at 5 minutes. The results were good, showing dose response. The mean half-lives were 1.48 and 1.37 hours, respectively. After the administration of 10 and 20 mg/kg of CAZ each to 2 children by 30 minutes' i.v. drip infusion, the mean serum levels got to the peak of 58.5 and 80.0 mcg/ml, respectively, on completion of the administration, showing dose response. The mean half-lives were 1.06 hours in the former 2 cases, and 1.38 and 3.26 hours, respectively, in the latter 2 cases. The reason for the prolongation observed in 1 case was not clear. 2. In the above mentioned each 2 cases receiving one i.v. injection, the mean urinary levels got to the peak of 4,240 and 4,445 mcg/ml, respectively, at 0-2 hours after the administration , and the urinary recovery rates during the first 6 hours were high, 95.7% and 99.5%, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Fundamental and clinical studies of ceftazidime in the pediatric field]. 637 61
Clinical studies on cefoperazone (CPZ), a new cephalosporin, were carried out at our department. Seventeen children wih the following bacterial infections were treated with CPZ; pneumonia (7),
bronchitis
(6), tonsillitis (1), sepsis (2) and purulent
meningitis
(1). The dosage was 56 approximately 182 mg/kg/day, divided into 4 doses, and given intravenous injection. The duration of administration was from 4 to 15 days. Clinical results were excellent in 3 cases, good in 9 cases, moderate in 3 cases, poor in 1 case and uncertain in 1 case. The overall efficacy rate was 75.0%. No side effects were observed.
...
PMID:[Clinical examination of cefoperazone in pediatrics (author's transl)]. 645 43
A new semisynthetic 1-oxa-beta-lactam derivative, 6059-S, was evaluated for its safety and efficacy in children. Twenty-five patients were treated with 10 to 274 mg/kg per day of 6059-S by intravenous administrations. The diagnosis of the patients were acute pharyngitis (2),
acute bronchitis
(2), pneumonia (4), pertussis (4), acute enterocolitis (2), recurrent urinary tract infection (2), suspected septicemia (3), and acute purulent
meningitis
(1); and the remaining 5 patients were considered to have nonbacterial infections. The pathogens recovered were Streptococcus pneumoniae (1), Haemophilus influenzae (4), Haemophilus parainfluenzae (1), Enterobacter cloacae (1), Enterobacter aerogenes (1), Proteus morganii (1), Psuedomonas aeruginosa (2) and Salmonella typhimurium (1). All the patients of bacterial infections were cured after the 6059-S therapy. However, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Salmonella typhimurium were not eradicated after the 6059-S therapy, and the rate of bacterial disappearance was 75%. Diarrhea (3), precordial pain (2, only in cases with high-dose therapy), transient elevation of GOT and GPT (2), and transient eosinophilia (2) were found to be associated with the 6059-S therapy. However, no severe adverse reactions were encountered. Half life of the serum 6059-S level was 1.34 +/- 0.16 hours. CSF concentrations in a case with Haemophilus influenzae meningitis ranged 4.0 to 9.7 mcg/ml after an intravenous injection of 34.3 to 75 mg/kg of 6059-S. From the present study, 6059-S appears to be a safe and effective antibiotic when used in children with susceptible bacterial infections. It remains to be further determined whether 6059-S is superior to ABPC in the treatment of Haemophilus influenzae meningitis.
...
PMID:[Clinical evaluation of 6059-S therapy in children (author's transl)]. 645 68
Cefpiramide (CPM), a new broad-spectrum cephalosporin antibiotic with good antipseudomonas activities, was evaluated for its safety and efficacy in 20 children with bacterial infections. The diagnoses of the patients included pneumonia (10),
acute bronchitis
(1), streptococcal pharyngitis (1), purulent cervical lymphadenitis (1), urinary tract infections (2), acute enterocolitis (1), infections in agranulocytosis and acute leukemia (2), and acute purulent
meningitis
(2). Of the 20 patients, 17 were cured by the CPM therapy. The main etiologic pathogens were H. influenzae, P. aeruginosa, P. fluorescens, S. pneumoniae and E. coli. The serum half-life of CPM was 2.4 to 4.1 hours after an intravenous bolus injection. As an adverse reaction, diarrhea was encountered in 4 cases, and 1 of them experienced severe watery diarrhea with significant fecal colonization of K. oxytoca. The data suggest that CPM is an effective antibiotic when used in children with susceptible bacterial infections. Administrations divided in 2 to 3 dosages will be enough to maintain effective serum levels.
...
PMID:[Clinical evaluation of cefpiramide in pediatric]. 665 38
The type distribution of pneumococci isolated from 462 patients was determined. In this survey type 1 strains were the most numerous but type 14 and type 18 caused the most infections in children under five years of age. The most common infections were pneumonia,
meningitis
or septicaemia. Possible pre-disposing causes included a history of heavy drinking, head injury,
bronchitis
or other chest infection, heart disease, liver disease, malignancy, viral infection or abnormality of the spleen.
...
PMID:Systemic disease caused by pneumococci. 666 84
In an eight year period 16 cases of serious extrapulmonary Hemophilus influenzae infection in adults were identified, including cases of
meningitis
, pericarditis, epiglottitis, empyema, cellulitis, osteomyelitis, endometritis, urinary tract infection, orbital cellulitis, primary peritonitis, mesenteric lymphadenitis and aortic graft infection. An 18 month prospective study of H. influenzae infection in hospitalized adults identified 10 cases of
bronchitis
, 25 of pneumonia and 65 of respiratory tract colonization, but there were no extrapulmonary infections. In 29 percent of the respiratory tract infections, H. influenzae appeared to be a nosocomial pathogen; in 71 percent, the infection was mixed. Finally, 110 clinical isolates of H. influenzae were studied for antimicrobial susceptibility. Eight percent were ampicillin resistant, two strains were resistant to tetracycline and one to chloramphenicol, but all were susceptible to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole and cefamandole.
...
PMID:Hemophilus influenzae in hospitalized adults: current perspectives. 696 96
Branhamella catarrhalis, previously named Neisseria catarrhalis and supposed to be a saprophytic inhabitant of the human upper respiratory tract, is a facultative pathogen. It was already proved by other authors to be able to cause serious and even lethal respiratory infections and purulent
meningitis
. Our aim was only to call attention to its repeated and massive isolation of pure culture from nose and throat swabs of hospitalized children who mostly suffered from asthma bronchiale and spastic
bronchitis
. The isolation of this bacterium often occurred in clusters of 3 to 4 in the same ward. Some other observation indicate occasional spreading of this organisms from person to person at home and in the hospital. In most cases Branhamella catarrhalis behaved only as a mild infectant, but in immunodeficient or otherwise weakened patient it can cause serious hospital infection.
...
PMID:Branhamella catarrhalis as a human pathogen and a possible hospital infectant. 719 50
A survey is given on infection-conditioned bacterial diseases in internal medicine. Important for practice is the classification of the infectious diseases in such with high and slight contagiousness as well as in infection-conditioned diseases with special affection of organs, the symptoms of which coin the further course. Furthermore is referred to the differentiation of specific infectious diseases with clear reference to a definite causative organism and of unspecific infectious diseases which in the majority represent themselves as polyetiologic syndromes with uniform clinical pictures. More discussed are the infectious hospitalism, the salmonellial enteritis, the yersinioses, typhoid fever, paratyphoid fever, bacterial dysentery, scarlet fever, diphtheria,
meningitis
, brucelloses, leptospiroses, listerioses, pneumonias,
bronchitis
, obstructive diseases of the respiratory tract as well as pyelonephritis and bacterial carditis.
...
PMID:[Bacterial diseases in internal medicine caused by infection]. 740 99
Since penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae first recognized in 1967, the rate of penicillin-resistant strains has been increasing worldwide. There have been up to 50% from pediatric specimens in Japan. We reported three pediatric cases with penicillin G resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae infection to show some important clue from these cases for clinical practice against resistant pneumococcal infection. The first case was a typical acute mastoiditis, although we have experienced only masked mastoiditis recently. The second case was
meningitis
with septicemia, which did not show any abnormality in the first obtained cerebrospinal fluid. The third case was recurrent
bronchitis
in a child with cerebral palsy. The minimum inhibition concentrations of these isolated strains were 0.25 microgram/ml in the second case an 2.0 microgram/ml in the first and third cases.
...
PMID:[Three interesting pediatric cases with penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae infection]. 787 77
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