Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (Haemophilus)
15,372 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To define the clinical features of posttraumatic meningitis in the pediatric age group, we have reviewed 7 cases presenting to Children's Hospital-San Diego between 1981 and February 1988. Ages ranged from 3 to 16 years with 4 of the 7 patients being adolescents (greater than 13 years of age). These 4 adolescents accounted for 25% of the adolescent bacterial meningitis and all cases of nonmeningococcal meningitis in this age group. Six of 7 patients had positive cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cultures and positive blood cultures. Organisms were Streptococcus pneumoniae (4), group A streptococcus (1), and Haemophilus influenzae (1). Five of the 7 patients required intensive cardiovascular and respiratory support. Four patients had a good neurologic recovery, 2 patients had neurologic sequelae, and 1 suffered sensorineural hearing loss. These data suggest that direct invasion of the CSF by bacteria may cause sepsis and cardiovascular compromise. Further, in adolescents with nonmeningococcal bacterial meningitis, a history of previous head trauma and CSF leakage should be sought and radiographic evaluation for CSF fistula should be considered.
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PMID:Posttraumatic meningitis in adolescents and children. 213 4

Haemophilus influenzae type b is a human bacterial pathogen that causes approximately 12,000 cases of H influenzae type b meningitis and 7500 cases of other forms of invasive disease annually in the United States. This organism is the leading cause of bacterial meningitis in the United States. The cause of meningitis can be established more accurately than that of other forms of invasive bacterial disease because the isolation of the bacterium from the cerebrospinal fluid or blood and/or the detection of bacterial antigen can correctly attribute the infection to a specific bacterial agent and dictate appropriate antimicrobial therapy. In children, more than 95% of all invasive diseases attributable to Haemophilus species, including septicemia, pneumonia, epiglottis, cellulitis, arthritis, osteomyelitis, and pericarditis, are due to H influenzae type b. It has been estimated that systemic disease caused by H influenzae type b occurs in approximately 1 in 200 children in the United States before the age of five. The case fatality rate for H influenzae type b meningitis is approximately 5%, and substantial morbidity has also been documented to result from central nervous system infection with this agent. Of surviving children reported in a 1969 paper, 40% had significant neurologic sequelae after meningitis. A more recent study demonstrated substantial neurologic improvement during the first few months after hospitalization, but at 1 year of age 8% of the children had neurologic or intellectual sequelae of their meningitis. Milder defects with an array of developmental problems have been reported in as many as one third to one half of all survivors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Epidemiology of Haemophilus influenzae type b infections. 217 52

With the exception of a few consistent pathogens--Pasteurella multocida strains of bovine hemorrhagic septicemia and fowl cholera, Actinobacillus (Haemophilus) pleuropneumoniae, Haemophilus aegyptius and Haemophilus paragallinarum--members of the family Pasteurellaceae are commensal parasites on mucous membranes of vertebrate animals. Many have pathogenic potential, which becomes manifest under conditions of immunodeficiency and stress. Pathogenesis (except in porcine atrophic rhinitis) depends on mobilization of inflammatory responses probably in large part by endotoxin with contributions from protein toxins, which interfere with leukocyte activity and, by their cytotoxicity, cause exacerbation of the inflammatory reaction. Disease patterns include pneumonic/septicemic, upper respiratory and local/traumatic. Acquired resistance is chiefly antibody-dependent, and, with current and emerging biotechnical resources, stands a good chance of being artificially achievable for many important diseases attributed to Pasteurellaceae.
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PMID:Our understanding of the Pasteurellaceae. 219 10

Haemophilus influenzae is a gram-negative rod, causing severe infections in childhood, including meningitis, sepsis, epiglottits, pneumonia and otitis. Most of the invasive infections are due to serotype b. Since ampicillin-resistance is increasing, modern cephalosporines like cefotaxime and ceftriaxone are the antibiotics of choice in severe disease. Bacterial meningitis due to Haemophilus influenzae and epiglottitis are both still life-threatening diseases with a lethality of 5% to 25%, and there are severe sequelae in 35% of meningitis cases. Efforts have been made to develop efficacious vaccines. While immunogenicity of type b polysaccharide was low in the high-risk age (below 18 months), conjugated vaccines with either diphtheria-toxoid or Neisseria meningitis outer membrane protein and the Hib polysaccharide were found to be strongly immunogenic even in the first months of life. These vaccines show every few side-effects and can easily be combined with other immunizations such as DPT and DT. Thus, the incidence of invasive infections due to Haemophilus influenzae type b might decline in future.
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PMID:[Haemophilus influenzae type B. Disease and prevention]. 219 58

Five cases of bacteremic infections due to Haemophilus influenzae type f in adults are described, and previous reports of type f disease in nonpediatric patients are reviewed. Respiratory tract infections were most common in our series (two cases of pneumonia, one of epiglottitis, and one of nosocomial septicemia probably resulting from aspiration pneumonitis). All of these patients had factors predisposing them to respiratory tract infections, e.g., neurologic disease, congestive heart failure, or cigarette smoking. A fifth patient, who was bacteremic without an apparent primary focus, had dysgammaglobulinemia. Six episodes of bacteremia occurred in five patients; 11 of 13 cultures of blood obtained before parenteral antibiotic therapy were positive. All isolates were biotype I and susceptible to ampicillin. Antibiotic therapy was curative in cases of proved respiratory tract infection but failed in the setting of nosocomial septicemia, perhaps because of delayed initiation. The brevity of antibiotic treatment of the cryptogenic bacteremia permitted infection of a prosthetic vascular graft and recurrent bacteremia. Graft removal and repeated antibiotic therapy were curative.
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PMID:Bacteremic disease due to Haemophilus influenzae capsular type f in adults: report of five cases and review. 220 Oct 66

A prospective nationwide surveillance of invasive Haemophilus influenzae type b disease among adults (greater than or equal to 16 years old) was conducted in Finland during 1985 through 1988. Thirty-one cases were identified (annual incidence, 0.22/100,000). Of these infections, 71% occurred in patients with severe underlying conditions. The overall case fatality rate was 26%. Septicemia (13 patients) and pneumonia (seven patients) were the most common clinical manifestations of H influenzae type b infection; the others were epiglottitis (six patients), meningitis (three patients), and arthritis (two patients). Epiglottitis occurred in significantly younger patients, all of whom were women and four of whom were previously healthy. Subtyping of the H influenzae type b isolates according to the major outer membrane protein subtype, biotype, and lipopolysaccharide serotype showed that patterns that were uncommon (14%) among children were more common (27%) in the adults.
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PMID:Spectrum of invasive Haemophilus influenzae type b disease in adults. 224 74

In the diagnosis and treatment of bacterial pneumonia, the isolation and resistance pattern of the causative organisms are very relevant. Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) with quantitative culture is the best technique to obtain material for bacteriological investigations in nonintubated medical patients and in a baboon model. The present study was designed to clarify the following questions: What is the value of BAL compared to tracheal secretion (TS) in ventilated patients with regard to antibiotic therapy? Is it possible to distinguish colonization and infection by investigation of BAL? MATERIAL AND METHODS. In 34 ventilated patients, we studied the diagnostic and therapeutic value of BAL in comparison to TS. Thirteen patients suffered from pneumonia, 9 patients were colonized, and in 12 pneumonia was uncertain. These terms are defined as follows: 1. Pneumonia: temperature over 38.5 degrees C, leukocyte count over 12,000/mm3, infiltrate in the x-ray compatible with pneumonia, purulent tracheal secretion, positive bacteriological findings. All criteria must be fulfilled. 2. Colonized patients: mechanical ventilation more than 7 days, no signs of infection, isolation of the same bacteria species in two previously obtained tracheal secretions. 3. Uncertain pneumonia: not all criteria mentioned above were fulfilled. BAL was performed in the usual manner. The bronchoscope was wedged into a distal airway and 6 x 20 ml of sterile, nonbacteriostatic saline (0.9% NaCl) was instilled through the suction channel and subsequently aspirated. All investigation materials were immediately processed in the bacteriological laboratory. From the BAL specimen Giemsa and Gram preparations were performed to look for contamination from the throat and intracellular bacteria. RESULTS. Patients with pneumonia: In all patients the TS and BAL were positive. Cultures from BAL and TS were in agreement in 77% of the cases. In 10 patients intracellular bacteria (BAL) were present, in two patients the Gram preparation was nonapplicable because of destroyed cells. In one patient Haemophilus spp. could be isolated in the BAL (10(5)/ml BAL), but not in TS, which definitely influenced therapy. Colonized patients: In all patients TS and BAL were positive, with exact agreement in 33% of the cases. The concentration of isolated bacteria (BAL) was not as high in these patients as in the patients with pneumonia (median: 8 X 10(3) vs 6 X 10(4]. However BAL allowed no differentiation between colonization and infection in individual cases. Uncertain pneumonia: TS was positive in 8 patients, no TS could be obtained in 4. BAL was sterile in 4. Only in 2 bacteria greater than or equal to 10(4)/ml were isolated and both patients had intracellular bacteria. The results (BAL) influenced therapy in 5 cases (4 patients received no antibiotics; in 1 patient the antibiotics were modified). CONCLUSION. BAL is very helpful in patients suspected of having pneumonia and in sepsis of unknown origin when pneumonia should be excluded...
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PMID:[Bacterial pneumonia in ventilated patients. The role of bronchoalveolar lavage in diagnosis and therapy]. 230 50

In a retrospective analysis of 2110 admissions to the pediatric intensive care unit, 564 cases of septic shock were identified (26.7% of the total admissions). Septic shock was defined in patients with: (1) clinical evidence of sepsis; (2) fever (greater than 38.3 degrees C) or hypothermia (less than 35.6 degrees C); (3) tachycardia; (4) tachypnea; and (5) inadequate organ perfusion. Inadequate perfusion was defined as hypotension or evidence of peripheral hypoperfusion (poor capillary refill or cyanosis with hypoxemia, oliguria, acidosis or altered mentation). Inotropic support was required to maintain an adequate blood pressure and perfusion in 268 of 564 patients (47.5%). Septic shock with confirmed bacterial infection occurred in 143 patients (143 of 564, 25.2%); these cases were caused by Haemophilus influenzae, type b (59 of 143, 41.3%), Neisseria meningitidis (26 of 143, 18.2%) and Streptococcus pneumoniae (16 of 143, 11.2%). Eight of 564 (1.4%) cases of septic shock were not clinically apparent on initial evaluation and were diagnosed within 24 hours after admission to the hospital. We conclude that septic shock occurs more frequently in children than previously appreciated and may develop after admission to the hospital.
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PMID:Septic shock in children: bacterial etiologies and temporal relationships. 233

Mycoplasma hominis or Ureaplasma urealyticum have previously been isolated from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in 13 of 100 newborn infants tested from a high risk university hospital population where the mothers were of predominantly lower income and socioeconomic status and had often received little or no prenatal care. We sought to determine whether such infections occur in neonates born to women cared for mainly through private obstetric practices and who delivered in 4 suburban community hospitals. CSF cultures were done in 318 infants during an 8-month period. M. hominis was isolated from 9 and U. urealyticum from 5 CSF cultures. Four infants infected with U. urealyticum and 3 infected with M. hominis were born at term. One infant infected with U. urealyticum had a birth weight of less than 1000 g. In 5 infants clearance of the infecting organism was documented without specific treatment. Twelve infants had good perinatal outcomes regardless of treatment and 2 died. One death in a 2240-g infant infected with M. hominis was associated with Haemophilus influenzae sepsis and pneumonia. The other death occurred 3 days after birth in a 630-g infant infected with U. urealyticum who had evidence of meningitis and intraventricular hemorrhage. Results of this study suggest that mycoplasmas are common causes of neonatal CSF infections, not only in high risk populations, but also in the general population.
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PMID:Mycoplasmal infections of cerebrospinal fluid in newborn infants from a community hospital population. 233 9

Clinical and pharmacokinetic studies on aztreonam (AZT) were performed in neonates. The results are summarized as follows: A total of 6 cases consisting of 5 mature and 1 low-birth-weight infants was clinically evaluated. AZT 20 mg/kg was administered 2-3 times daily, via 1 hour intravenous drip infusion for 6-21 days. Concomitantly, vancomycin (VCM) 15 mg/kg was administered to 1 case 3 times daily, via 1 hour intravenous drip infusion for 3 days and ampicillin (ABPC) 20-50 mg/kg to 3 cases 3 time daily via 30 minutes intravenous drip infusion for 2-6 days. Of the 6 bacterial infection cases (1 with sepsis and purulent meningitis, 2 with sepsis, 2 with urinary tract infection and 1 with perirectal abscess), clinical effects of AZT were evaluated in 4 cases (2 each with sepsis and urinary tract infection) as "excellent" in all the cases. All of the causative organisms (Escherichia coli in 3 and Enterobacter cloacae in 1) were eradicated by the treatment with AZT. Neither clinical side effect nor abnormal laboratory test value caused by AZT was observed. MICs of AZT against 10 clinical isolates (Staphylococcus aureus 1, E. coli 4, Klebsiella pneumoniae 1, E. cloacae 1, Haemophilus influenzae 1 and Pseudomonas aeruginosa 2) from neonatal patients with bacterial infections were examined. As results, AZT showed very good antibacterial activity comparable or even superior to cefoperazone, cefotaxime, latamoxef; however, the activity against P. aeruginosa was inferior to imipenem.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Clinical and pharmacokinetic studies on aztreonam in neonates]. 237 92


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