Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0341503 (
bacterial peritonitis
)
1,303
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a prospective, open, controlled clinical study, 190 consecutive patients who were thought to have
bacterial peritonitis
before operation, were randomised to antibiotic treatment during and after operation with either ceftriaxone 1 g plus metronidazole 1.5 g once daily (n = 94) or ampicillin 2 g plus netilmicin 150 mg twice daily plus metronidazole 1.5 g once daily (n = 96). Incisional and deep surgical wound infections, postoperative pneumonia and
urinary tract infection
as well as deaths caused by infection were recorded. Ceftriaxone-metronidazole was significantly more effective than ampicillin-netilmicin-metronidazole, 6/94 wound related infections (6%) compared to 18/96 (19%) (p = 0.02). In patients with peritonitis caused by a perforated colon or appendix the rates of clinical failure were 6% and 28%, respectively. We consider ceftriaxone plus metronidazole an efficient and easily administered antibiotic regimen in patients with
bacterial peritonitis
, and both the wide range of activity against Gram-negative aerobic rods and the long half life of ceftriaxone seem to be beneficial.
...
PMID:Ceftriaxone/metronidazole is more effective than ampicillin/netilmicin/metronidazole in the treatment of bacterial peritonitis. 168 17
Infections are frequent in patients with liver cirrhosis, as their defenses against infectious agents are altered. But bacteremia occurring in cirrhotic patients has seldom been reported in the literature. From 1981 to 1986, we collected 197 cases with 228 episodes of bacteremia for this retrospective study. The incidence of bacteremia in cirrhotic patients was 8.8%; no significant difference was noted between cirrhotic patients with variant etiologies of HBV(+), HBV(-) and alcohol. But the incidence increased with the severity of the disease (1%, 4.8%, 17.1% in Child's A, B, C groups, respectively). Gram-negative bacteria were the predominant microorganisms of bacteremia (75.6%). Among them, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Aeromonas hydrophilia were the three most commonly detected microorganisms. Gram-positive bacterias were detected in 21.2% of patients with bacteremia, with predominance of the Streptococcus group and Staphylococcus aureus. In about 26.3% of cases the infectious sources were the same by bacteria cultures as from blood. The most common sources were spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
,
urinary tract infection
, pneumonia and biliary tree infection. In cirrhotic patients with and without bacteremia, the mortality rate increased significantly in the bacteremia group (54.8% vs 23.2%, P less than 0.05). By Child's classification, the mortality of patients with classes B and C increased significantly after onset of bacteremia. There was no significant difference in mortality between bacteremic patients in the HBV(+), HBV(-) and alcohol groups. In conclusion, bacteremia is a severe complication of liver cirrhosis and a sign of a poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Bacteremia in patients with cirrhosis of the liver. 177 12
Bacterial infection is a serious and often fatal complication of patients with liver disease and can prove fatal either directly or by precipitation of gastrointestinal bleeding, renal failure, or hepatic encephalopathy. At greatest risk are patients with alcoholic cirrhosis or decompensated chronic liver disease, or cases of acute liver disease who progress to fulminant hepatic failure or subacute hepatic necrosis. Infection appears to be unusual in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis. The site and type of infection is unrelated to the aetiology of the liver disease. Bacteraemia, pneumonia,
urinary tract infection
and spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
are most common but infective endocarditis and meningitis, especially with pneumococci, are easily overlooked. Clinical suspicion of infection must be high as the only indication may be a general deterioration in the patients' clinical state, increasing encephalopathy or renal impairment. In the case of patients with fulminant hepatic failure, infection may precipitate the initial or recurrent encephalopathy and contributes to death in 10% of fatal cases. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is now recognized to occur in the absence of clinical features of peritonitis. The PMN content of the ascitic fluid may provide the only indication of infection and is the most readily available screening test. The most common types of organism responsible for all types of infection are Gram-negative enteric and streptococci, especially pneumococci, while infection with anaerobes is rare. Risk factors for infection include decompensated alcoholic liver disease, fulminant hepatic failure, gastrointestinal bleeding, invasive practical procedures and impaired host defence mechanisms against infection. Of the host defence mechanisms, impaired function of the reticuloendothelial system, complement, and PMNs represent the most common and serious defects. Defects of humoral immunity are present in ascitic fluid from patients with cirrhosis and are probably a major reason for development of spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
. Diuresis improves these functions and reduces the risk of peritonitis. Treatment of infections even with the appropriate antibiotic is still associated with a high mortality but the use of adjuvant gut sterilization is promising, particularly in cases infected with Gram-negative enteric organisms. Infusions of fresh frozen plasma, blood and cryoprecipitate improve some systemic host defences and may be beneficial in the treatment and reduction of risk of infection.
...
PMID:Bacterial infections complicating liver disease. 265 49
Aztreonam, the first of the new class of monobactams, has a narrow and specific range of bactericidal activity; it is highly active against Gram-negative aerobic pathogens but is essentially inactive against Gram-positive or anaerobic bacteria. Several unique features indicate that aztreonam may provide an attractive choice for the treatment of serious Gram-negative infection in adults and children. Clinical study in adults has shown aztreonam to be highly effective against infections of the urinary and lower respiratory tracts, the musculoskeletal system and the female genitourinary tract. It also has proved useful in neutropenic patients, including those with cancer, and for treatment of
bacterial peritonitis
, gonorrhea, cellulitis and wound infections. Reported clinical and microbiologic cure rates have been comparable to those associated with traditional therapeutic approaches (85 to 100%). In the treatment of children with
urinary tract infection
as well as other types of infections, aztreonam therapy in a dosage of 30 mg/kg given every 6 to 8 hours was associated with satisfactory clinical and microbiologic cure rates. There appear to be specific clinical situations for which aztreonam may be an appropriate alternative to more toxic therapies, although comparative trials are needed to delineate the exact place of aztreonam in the armamentarium against bacterial infection.
...
PMID:Clinical experience with aztreonam. 268 8
We prospectively studied 51 consecutive bacteremic patients with chronic liver disease in order to evaluate their clinical presentation and to assess the relationship of various clinical parameters to mortality. Forty-two patients had alcoholic liver disease and 40 were in Class C, by the Pugh modification of Child's criteria. Soft tissue infections were the most common source of bacteremia, followed by pneumonia, spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
and
urinary tract infection
. Gram positive organisms were isolated in 69% of cases, and Gram negative ones in 31%. In nine patients, no source of bacteremia was detected. Leukocytosis occurred in 59% of patients and bandemia in only 41%. Although appropriate antibiotic therapy was begun in all cases on admission, 17 patients (33%) died in the hospital. Of 38 clinical parameters evaluated, multivariate analysis revealed that the three variables contributing the most independent information toward predicting in-hospital mortality were the absence of a history of fever, an elevated serum creatinine and marked leukocytosis. Improved understanding of the pathophysiologic relationship between these parameters and patient outcome may enable us to improve the therapy of bacteremic patients with chronic liver disease.
...
PMID:A prospective evaluation of bacteremic patients with chronic liver disease. 341 30
One hundred and seventy hospitalized patients with cirrhosis were included in a prospective and sequential study, to verify the prevalence and most frequent causes of bacterial infection. The differences in clinical and laboratory data between the two groups were analyzed: group I--80 patients who developed bacterial infection and group II--90 patients without bacterial infection. The prevalence or cumulative frequency of the development of bacterial infection during one hospitalization was 47.06%. Among these, the most frequent types of infection were: spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
(SBP): 31.07%,
urinary tract infection
(
UTI
): 25.24% and pneumonia: 21.37%. Community infections were more frequent (56.25%) than nosocomial infections (32.50%) and they occurred sequentially in 11.25% of the cases. The agents responsible were gram negative bacteria in 72.34% of the cases. Clinical and biochemical parameters in bacterial infection were generally correlated with the severity of liver disease. Child-Pugh classification showed a predominance of class C in infected cirrhotic patients compared to non-infected ones. During hospitalization, the mortality rate of group I was 30% whereas in group II it was 5.55% (P = 0.0001). SBP and pneumonia were the most severe types of infection, with high mortality rates, 31.25% and 40.91%, respectively. These results indicate that bacterial infection is a severe complication in the course of cirrhosis.
...
PMID:A prospective study of bacterial infections in patients with cirrhosis. 822 17
Nitric oxide production was studied in cirrhotic patients with spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
(SBP) or with other infections. We followed up on the time course of serum nitrate levels in 51 hospitalized patients aged between 34 and 81 years. Four groups were defined: patients with SBP (group 1, n = 14), patients with bacteremia (group 2, n = 11), patients with
urinary tract infection
(group 3, n = 11) and patients in a stable clinical condition (group 4, n = 20). The four groups did not differ in terms of Pugh score (11 +/- 1, 10 +/- 1, 11 +/- 1, and 10 +/- 1, respectively). Serum nitrate levels averaged 31 +/- 2 micromol/L in group 4 (84 samples). On the day results of cytobacteriological examination were positive, mean serum nitrate levels were 75 +/- 17, 63 +/- 9, and 36 +/- 9 micromol/L, respectively, in groups 1 (17 cases), 2 (11 cases), and 3 (11 cases) (P < .001). The maximum nitrate values recorded during follow-up were higher in groups 1 (149 +/- 15 micromol/L) and 2 (112 +/- 11 micromol/L) than in group 3 (66 +/- 7 micromol/L; P < .001 and < .01, respectively). These maximum values were recorded in all groups approximately 2 weeks after the infection was diagnosed. The mean duration of NO overproduction, as defined by nitrate level (3)90 micromol/L, was 15 +/- 3 days in group 1 and 5 +/- 1 day in group 2. When the nitrate concentration was studied in serum and ascitic fluid sampled on the same day, it was found to be higher in ascitic fluid than in serum in eight cases of SBP in the period preceding the peak serum nitrate concentration (100 +/- 17 vs. 63 +/- 14 micromol/L; P < .001). Our data indicate that SBP in cirrhotic patients led to a long-lasting increased local production of NO. This overproduction may contribute to maintaining splanchnic vasodilation and thus worsen the hyperkinetic state in these patients.
...
PMID:Long-lasting NO overproduction in cirrhotic patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. 918 47
Most bacterial infections in cirrhotic patients are hospital-acquired.
Urinary tract infections
, spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
(SBP), respiratory tract infections, and bacteremia are the most frequent bacterial infectious complications seen in cirrhotic patients. SBP is the most characteristic infectious complication of cirrhotic patients, and it is defined as the infection of a previously sterile ascitic fluid, with no apparent intra-abdominal source of infection. The incidence of SBP in cirrhotic patients admitted to hospital with ascites has been estimated to range between 7 and 23%. The diagnosis is established on the basis of clinical signs and symptoms and/or a polymorphonuclear cell count in ascitic fluid higher than 250/mm3. This diagnosis is confirmed by a positive culture in approximately 70% of the cases. The remaining 30% are considered culture-negative SBP but are empirically treated with antibiotics because severe peritonitis and death may follow if these patients are not treated. Early diagnosis, the routine use of diagnostic paracentesis in patients admitted to hospital with ascites, and, especially, the use of adequate antibiotics are very important tools in the treatment of SBP. Third-generation cephalosporins are the first-choice antibiotic treatment in SBP, although selected patients with SBP, those with normal renal function and without hepatic encephalopathy, shock, or gastrointestinal bleeding, may be treated with oral quinolones. Selective intestinal decontamination with norfloxacin is safe and useful in the primary and secondary prophylaxis of SBP, although the incidence of quinolone-resistant organisms is increasing and this may be a problem in the future.
...
PMID:Bacterial infections in liver disease. 940 68
The incidence of bacterial infections in cirrhotic patients admitted to hospital is very high. In several studies, 30% to 50% of cirrhotics presented bacterial infections at admission, or developed this type of complication during hospitalization. Most bacterial infections in cirrhotic patients are hospital-acquired. Between 15% to 35% of cirrhotics admitted to hospital develop nosocomial infections; these figures contrast sharply with the hospital-acquired infection rate in the general hospital population (5% to 7%).
Urinary tract infections
(12% to 29%), spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
(7% to 23%), respiratory tract infections (6% to 10%) and bacteraemia (4% to 9%) are the most frequent bacterial infectious complications seen in cirrhotic patients. However, since spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
is the most characteristic bacterial infection in cirrhosis, this report will focus (mainly) on this infectious complication.
...
PMID:Bacterial infections in liver cirrhosis. 1060 6
Infectious complications in cirrhotic patients can cause severe morbidity and mortality. Bacterial infections are estimated to cause up to 25% of deaths in cirrhotic patients. The most frequent are
urinary tract infection
, spontaneous
bacterial peritonitis
, respiratory tract infection, and bacteremia. It has been said that cirrhosis is the most common form of acquired immunodeficiency, exceeding even AIDS. The specific risk factors for infection in cirrhotic patients are low serum albumin, gastrointestinal bleeding, intensive care unit admission for any cause, and therapeutic endoscopy. Certain infectious agents are more virulent and more common in patients with liver disease. These include Vibrio, Campylobacter, Yersinia, Plesiomonas, Enterococcus, Aeromonas, Capnocytophaga, and Listeria species, as well as organisms from other species. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is a frequent, severe, life-threatening complication of patients with ascites. Current observations and recommendations regarding treatment and prophylaxis are reviewed. A brief synopsis of miscellaneous infections encountered in cirrhotic patients is also included.
...
PMID:Infectious complications of cirrhosis. 1146 97
1
2
3
Next >>