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)

Pharmacokinetic, bacteriological and clinical studies on cefpodoxime proxetil (CPDX-PR, CS-807), a newly developed oral cephem, were carried out in the treatment of infectious diseases in the field of pediatrics. 1. Since CPDX demonstrates very powerful antimicrobial actions against such Gram-negative bacilli as Escherichia coli, Salmonella sp., Klebsiella pneumoniae and Serratia sp., such Gram-positive cocci as Streptococcus pyogenes and Streptococcus pneumoniae, and beta-lactamase producing Branhamella catarrhalis and Haemophilus influenzae, this drug was thought to be useful for the treatment of pediatric infectious diseases when main causative bacteria in the field of pediatrics were taken into account. 2. When changes in blood and urine concentrations of CPDX following the administration of this drug at 3.7 mg/kg before meal were determined, Cmax and T1/2 were found to be 2.98 micrograms/ml at 2-hour and 1.73 hours, respectively; an urinary excretion rate in the first 6 hours and a maximum urine concentration were 32.5% and 52 micrograms/ml, respectively. 3. Clinically, 8 of 8 patients with the upper respiratory tract infections (100%), 28 of 29 patients with bronchitis and/or pneumonia (96.6%), 3 of 4 patients with otitis media (75%), 2 of 2 patients with sinusitis (100%), 3 of 3 patients with the skin soft tissue infections (100%), 1 of 1 patient with bacterial enteritis (100%) and 11 of 14 patients with urinary tract infections (78.6%) responded well to the treatment with CPDX-PR, showing a 91.8% efficacy rate in all the patients treated. 4. Bacteriologically, Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, S. pyogenes, S. pneumoniae, E. faecalis, B. catarrhalis, H. influenzae, E. coli and Salmonella typhimurium were all eradicated from 5, 1, 4, 6, 1, 5, 5, 11 and 1 patient, respectively. An eradication rate in all the patients examined was 97.5% (39/40). 5. Gastrointestinal symptoms appeared as side effects in 2 of 71 patients (vomiting in 1 and diarrhea in 1), hence, an incidence of side effects was 2.8% (2/71). As for abnormal laboratory findings, eosinophilia, thrombocytosis and increases in GOT and GPT were observed in 3 of 39 patients examined (7.7%), 1 of 39 patients (2.6%) and 2 of 34 patients (5.9%), respectively. In addition, we also examined the effect of the drug on the hemostatic system, but found no changes upon the treatment. Based on these results, it appeared that CPDX-PR was a useful and safe drug in treatment of infectious diseases in the field of pediatrics when administered 2-3 times a day at a dose of 3-6 mg/kg.
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PMID:[Pharmacokinetic, bacteriological and clinical studies on cefpodoxime proxetil in the field of pediatrics]. 281 Jul 29

The mechanisms by which bacteria colonize and damage ciliated epithelium are important in understanding the pathophysiology of rhinitis, sinusitis, and otitis. Bacteria that have the ability to impair mucociliary clearance would be at an advantage in establishing infection of ciliated surfaces. This study investigates the effect of Hemophilus Influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Branhamella catarrhalis, and Staphylococcus epidermidis on the ciliary activity of normal ciliated nasal epithelium in human beings. Ciliary activity of the nasal epithelium in the presence of each pathogen was assessed for more than 240 minutes with a photometric method of ciliary beat frequency (CBF) measurement. H. influenzae exerted significant effects on ciliary activity, with a 46% decrease in the CBF by 4 hours (with bacteria-containing broth) and a 32% decrease with bacteria-free filtrate. S. epidermidis decreased CBF by 44% with the bacterial broth. A sterile cell-free filtrate had no significant effect. S. pneumoniae and B. catarrhalis had no significant effect on CBF within a 240-minute period. H. influenzae and S. epidermidis disrupted normal synchronous ciliary motion, causing adjacent cilia to beat at different rates.
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PMID:The effects of sinus bacteria on human ciliated nasal epithelium in vitro. 313 82

Three hundred and one patients with maxillary sinusitis participated in a double-blind, randomized study at 11 ENT-clinics in Europe. Sinusitis was diagnosed by the presence of at least two signs and symptoms and sinus X-ray showing more than 6 mm swelling of the maxillary mucosa. A microbiological specimen was obtained by intrasinusal aspiration. The patients were randomly assigned to treatment either with bacampillin 800 mg b. i. d. or with amoxicillin 500 mg t. i. d. for ten days. The most frequently isolated bacteria were Haemophilus influenzae (94 strains), Streptococcus pneumoniae (66 strains) and Branhamella catarrhalis (12 strains). In 96 of the patients, no microorganisms could be isolated. Beta-lactamase production was found in one H. influenzae strain and in three B. catarrhalis strains. Two hundred and seventy-one patients could be evaluated for efficacy at the follow-up visit day 8-25. The overall clinical outcome was the same in both treatment groups. Adverse events such as skin reactions and upper and lower gastrointestinal reactions occurred in 17.4% of the amoxicillin treated patients and in 10.8% of the bacampicillin treated patients (p = 0.101).
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PMID:Efficacy of penicillin treatment in purulent maxillary sinusitis. A European multicenter trial. 314 Dec 90

Bacteriological findings in 339 sinus secretions obtained by puncture were investigated in 238 young adult patients with acute maxillary sinusitis. Aerobic and anaerobic cultures were performed immediately. A total of 76% of the secretions were positive. The most common pathogens isolated were Haemophilus influenzae (50%), Streptococcus pneumoniae (19%), Streptococcus pyogenes (5%), and Branhamella catarrhalis (2%). Coagulase-negative staphylococci and Staphylococcus aureus were isolated in 8 and 1% of the specimens, respectively. The staphylococci were almost invariably present in low numbers and, therefore, probably represented nasal contamination. Other aerobic species were found only occasionally. Anaerobes were isolated in 5% of the secretions. In one-half of these, a low concentration of Propionibacterium acnes was the sole anaerobe that was found, and it was usually mixed with a facultative organism (suggestive of contamination with nasal flora). Only 2% of the sinuses were considered to have true anaerobic infections (high concentrations of several species typical of anaerobic infection), indicating that anaerobes are not a significant cause of acute maxillary sinusitis in a young adult population. The high recovery of H. influenzae in this study indicates that aminopenicillins may be more appropriate choice than conventional penicillin in the antimicrobial therapy of acute maxillary sinusitis (only 2 of 168 H. influenzae strains produced beta-lactamase).
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PMID:Bacteriological findings of acute maxillary sinusitis in young adults. 318 86

Macroscopic purulence, leukocyte counts, and bacterial morphotypes in Gram-stained smears were investigated in 335 sinus secretions (240 aspirates and 95 injection aspirates) obtained by puncture in 234 young patients with acute maxillary sinusitis. Over 90% of the 147 aspirates macroscopically classified as purulent also contained high numbers of leukocytes (greater than 20 per oil immersion field). A total of 82% of the 147 macroscopically purulent aspirates and 79% of the 156 aspirates containing high numbers of leukocytes yielded presumed sinus pathogens by culture in quantities of greater than 10(3) CFU/ml. Streptococcus pneumoniae or Streptococcus pyogenes was associated relatively more often (92 or 87%, respectively) with high numbers of leukocytes than Haemophilus influenzae, which was not infrequently (29%) recovered from the less purulent aspirates. When a bacterial morphotype was seen in the Gram-stained smear, a corresponding sinus pathogen was isolated in quantities of greater than 10(3) CFU/ml in 92% of aspirates. Other bacterial species (most often staphylococci) were usually isolated in low numbers and were almost never seen in the smear, suggesting nasal contamination. The 95 injection aspirates behaved, to a large extent, like diluted aspirates, with the exception that there was a higher frequency of probable nasal contamination. Macroscopic purulence, high leukocyte counts, and bacterial morphotypes seen in Gram-stained smears each predicted well the isolation of a presumed sinus pathogen and in some cases supported the significance of an otherwise doubtful culture finding. However, the macroscopic appearance of the secretion should not be used to screen samples for culture, because in several cases H. influenzae grew from nonpurulent samples as well.
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PMID:Macroscopic purulence, leukocyte counts, and bacterial morphotypes in relation to culture findings for sinus secretions in acute maxillary sinusitis. 318 87

Microbiological analyses and antibiotic sensitivity tests were done on 26 patients with acute maxillary sinusitis during the first 9 months of 1986. Positive cultures were obtained in 23 of the patients, with anaerobes cultured in 13 (50%). Haemophilus influenzae was cultured in all non-producers of beta-lactamase. Therapy with erythromycin and chloromycetin appeared to be equally effective in aerobic cases and metronidazole was effective in all anaerobic cases.
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PMID:A microbiological study of acute maxillary sinusitis in Bloemfontein. 318 30

In the present study 141 children aged between 3 and 10 years and suffering from chronic maxillary sinusitis were treated non-selectively in one of 4 ways: amoxicillin combined with decongestive nose drops, drainage of the maxillary sinus, a combination of the two, or a placebo. The duration of the follow-up period was 6 months. The therapeutic effects of the 4 forms of treatment did not differ significantly. Haemophilus influenzae and streptococcus pneumoniae were the micro-organisms encountered most often in these children. The results are discussed.
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PMID:Treatment of chronic maxillary sinusitis in children. 319 64

By antral aspiration, 200 sinus secretions were obtained from the same number of adult patients with maxillary sinusitis. The bacteriological findings were related to the character of the secretions as well as to the duration of symptoms, previous antibacterial treatment and possible dental genesis. Pathogens were isolated in 87% of 54 patients with untreated acute sinus empyema, Streptococcus pneumoniae being the most prevalent (57%). In 47 cases of treatment failure Haemophilus influenzae predominated and was found in 60% of the purulent secretions. In all, 11% of the 47 cases showed growth of beta-lactamase-producing H. influenzae, corresponding to 18% of all H. influenzae in this group. Staphylococcus aureus and anaerobic bacteria were infrequent findings except in purulent sinus secretion from patients with a long history. In contrast to patients with sinus empyema, no pathogens were found in the majority of 37 patients with non-purulent sinusitis.
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PMID:Bacteriology of maxillary sinusitis in relation to character of inflammation and prior treatment. 322 68

The serum antibodies against lipopolysaccharide of Hemophilus influenzae were measured in acute and convalescent phase sera from 30 patients with acute maxillary sinusitis using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Levels of antibodies in the maxillary antral secretions were also measured. In convalescent phase sera from 15 patients with acute sinusitis due to H influenzae, there was a threefold, 1.5-fold, and threefold increase in the geometric mean titers of IgG, IgM, and IgA, respectively. In antral secretions, titers were significantly higher (p less than .01) in culture-positive patients than in culture-negative patients for all antibodies. These data indicate that the immune system has the ability to respond systemically and locally with specific antibodies against lipopolysaccharide of H influenzae.
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PMID:Immunologic responses against lipopolysaccharide of Hemophilus influenzae in patients with acute sinusitis. 325 88

Efficacy and safety of Augmentin were evaluated in 79 patients, 64 adults and 15 children, treated for sinusitis during a multicentric hospital trial. Pre-treatment meatal pus samples were examined for bacteriology: 37 of 39 strains (95%) isolated from adults were sensitive to Augmentin, and two beta-lactamase producing Haemophilus strains sensitive to Augmentin were isolated from the children. Adult dosage was usually 2 g per day as two divided doses over 8 to 10 days. Recovery was obtained at end of treatment in 92% of cases, side effects being reported in 56 patients, including 8 with benign digestive disorders. Usual dosage in children was 25 to 50 mg/kg/d over 8 to 10 days and treatment was effective in 13 cases. One child developed a skin rash, and there was no report of digestive disturbance.
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PMID:[Results of a multicenter study of an amoxicillin-clavulanic acid combination in sinusitis in children and adults]. 330 May 4


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