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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Antibiotic therapy of bacterial meningitis is being reevaluated due to reports of ampicillin-resistant strains of
Hemophilus
influenzae type b. The infant reported had a relapse of H. influenzae type b meningitis after an excellent clinical and bacteriologic response to an initial course of combined antibiotic therapy including chloramphenicol. This relapse is postulated to be due to localized cerebral
vasculitis
which was not treated for a sufficient period of time during the initial course of therapy. The patient responded well to a second course of penicillin and chloramphenicol. Since the use of pencillin and chloramphenicol will be increasing, the clinician should be aware that bacteriologic relapse of H. influenzae type b meningitis may occur with chloramphenicol therapy.
...
PMID:Relapse of Hemophilus influenzae type b meningitis after combined antibiotic therapy: report of a case. 108 7
Twelve patients with skin
vasculitis
complicating cystic fibrosis are described. Seven of these were proven histologically and of these two had systemic vascultitis. Staining of vasculitic tissue by the avidin-biotin immunoperoxidase technique using both monoclonal and polyclonal antisera directed against
Haemophilus
influenzae, staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa did not consistently reveal any bacterial antigens in these tissues. In one patient the
vasculitis
appeared secondary to ranitidine. There was no evidence of autoimmune disease in any of the patients. Antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies were detected in the serum of 40 per cent of the patients with
vasculitis
complicating cystic fibrosis but in none of 61 controls with cystic fibrosis (but without
vasculitis
) matched for age and sex and with similar bacteriological flora of sputum.
...
PMID:Vasculitis complicating cystic fibrosis. 260 80
Recently, advances in identifying the etiologic agent, improving antibiotic therapy, and understanding the pathogenesis of complications of bacterial meningitis have been made. The acute and long-term sequelae and their courses have been documented. Acridine orange staining of the cerebrospinal fluid may identify bacteria in children with partially treated meningitis when gram-staining is not helpful. Monoclonal antibodies for meningococcus group B antigen have been developed and may prove useful for testing cerebrospinal fluid. Several newer cephalosporins have been shown to have excellent in vitro activity against the bacteria commonly associated with meningitis. They are indicated in the treatment of infants between 4 and 8 weeks of age, children in septic shock, children with liver disease, and children with infection with gram-negative enteric agents or bacteria resistant to ampicillin and chloramphenicol.
Vasculitis
and cerebral infarction may result in some of the complications, such as seizures and hemiparesis, noted in children, and their consequences can be documented by various neuroimaging procedures. The prognosis for ataxia is good, while that for sensorineural deafness is poor. The majority of children will have neither intellectual deficits nor difficulty with academic achievement. An effective vaccine against
Haemophilus
influenzae type b has been developed and is recommended for children between 18 and 60 months of age.
...
PMID:Update on bacterial meningitis. 328 49
Pneumonia was produced in nine, conventionally reared calves by intrabronchial inoculation with
Haemophilus
somnus. Volumes of pneumonic lung were determined stereologically, following serial slicing of lungs fixed by vascular perfusion. Twenty-four hours after inoculation, consistent findings were: neutrophilic to fibrinoid
vasculitis
, degeneration of alveolar macrophages, necrotizing bronchiolitis, suppurative bronchopneumonia, lobular necrosis, and dilation and thrombosis of lymphatics. Bacteria were identified histologically by an immunoperoxidase technic and were either free in alveoli or associated with degenerative alveolar macrophages. The latter suggests that macrophage degeneration may be a result of bacteria/macrophage interaction. Immune complex deposition is unlikely to be the principal mechanism for the
vasculitis
because bacterial antigen was not generally found in necrotic vessel walls, and two colostrum-deprived, H. somnus antibody-negative calves also had neutrophilic
vasculitis
12 to 24 hours after inoculation with the lowest dose of H. somnus used in the above experiment.
...
PMID:Experimental Haemophilus somnus pneumonia in calves and immunoperoxidase localization of bacteria. 330 6
Sixty-one of 68 sets of bovine lungs from which only
Haemophilus
somnus was isolated had microscopic lesions of purulent bronchiolitis and bronchopneumonia. In 37 of 61 lungs, the bronchiolar exudates were markedly necrotic with accompanying necrosis of the adjacent bronchiolar epithelium. Bronchiolitis obliterans was prominent in 23 of 28 lungs affected with chronic lesions with abscesses present in seven. Alveolar filling with inflammatory cells (neutrophils with fewer macrophages) was limited to peribronchiolar alveoli in 25 of 61 lungs and was multifocal to diffuse in the other 36. Lesions in the remaining lungs (7 of 68) were classified as fibrinous pneumonia with bronchiolitis (2), fibrinous pleuritis (2), suppurative interstitial pneumonia with
vasculitis
(2), and diffuse congestion (1).
...
PMID:Microscopic lesions associated with the isolation of Haemophilus somnus from pneumonic bovine lungs. 398 57
Nine feedlot cattle showed clinical signs consistent with those expected in thromboembolic meningoencephalitis. These signs included pyrexia, ataxia, posterior paresis, paralysis and coma. Brown necrotic foci with haemorrhagic borders were observed in the brains of three animals that had died. In these foci
vasculitis
, thrombosis, infarction and neutrophil infiltration were observed during microscopical examination.
Haemophilus
somnus was isolated in pure culture from the brains.
...
PMID:Thromboembolic meningoencephalitis diagnosed in Natal. 402 Aug 20
Four patients with severe bronchiectasis (chronic bronchial suppuration) are described who developed cutaneous lesions associated with exacerbations of their respiratory disease. The skin abnormalities consisted of purpuric lesions in three patients and an erythematous
vasculitis
in one. Circulating immune complexes were present in all patients and in three skin biopsy specimens showed deposition of C3, IgG, and IgA in dermal blood vessels.
Haemophilus
influenzae had been isolated from the sputum of all four patients and in two patients was present at the time the cutaneous lesions appeared. It is suggested that local immune complex deposition was responsible for the skin lesions which occurred during acute exacerbations of bronchiectasis.
...
PMID:Cutaneous vasculitis and immune complexes in severe bronchiectasis. 671 Apr 26
The effect of 2 strains of
Haemophilus
somnus on bovine endothelial cells in cultured arterial segments was investigated and compared with the effects of Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium. In cultures inoculated with either strain of H somnus, there was widespread contraction and desquamation of endothelial cells, exposing large areas of subendothelial collagen. Many bacteria were adherent to endothelial cells and some were in phagosomes within cells. Endothelial changes were milder in arterial cultures inoculated with E coli or S typhimurium than in those inoculated with either strain of H somnus. Adhesion of H somnus to vascular endothelial cells followed by exposure of subendothelial collagen may initiate the thrombosis,
vasculitis
, and ischemic necrosis characteristic of infectious thromboembolic meningoencephalitis in cattle. Arterial cultures might be useful in assaying the virulences of different strains of H somnus, and could be used to investigate the mechanism of their action on endothelial cells.
...
PMID:Effect of Haemophilus somnus on bovine endothelial cell in organ culture. 702 Apr 97
Experimental infection was produced by two of four isolates of ovine
Haemophilus
somnus given by intracisternal inoculation into two to three-month-old lambs. Isolate 2041 (originally obtained from a septicemic lamb in Alberta) caused lethal infection in eight of nine lambs, isolate 67p from the prepuce of a normal lamb produced less acute disease in four of nine lambs, and the other two isolates (93p and 1190) caused no detectable disease. Significant lesions were limited to the brain and spinal cord. Purulent meningitis was characteristic but
vasculitis
or septicemia were not detected, perhaps due to the route of inoculation. Since a difference in virulence was noted among strains, we analyzed surface proteins thought to be virulence factors of bovine H. somnus. Protein profiles of bovine and ovine H. somnus done by sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis showed similar patterns for virulent bovine isolates and ovine septicemic isolates. Preputial isolates showed a lower molecular mass major outer membrane protein than septicemic isolates. Antigenic analysis revealed that outer membrane proteins p270, p78, p76, p40, and p39 were detected in both ovine and bovine isolates except for 1190, which was probably not a true H. somnus isolate. Thus the preputial and septicemic isolates of ovine H. somnus were similar to bovine H. somnus in pathogenicity and in surface antigens.
...
PMID:Ovine Haemophilus somnus: experimental intracisternal infection and antigenic comparison with bovine Haemophilus somnus. 795 23
Lysinuric protein intolerance (LPI) is characterized by defective cellular transport of the dibasic amino acids, secondary dysfunction of the urea cycle, aversion to dietary protein, failure to thrive, hepatosplenomegaly and osteoporosis. Because several patients have suffered from recurrent respiratory infections and/or severe generalized varicella, and a few have developed systemic lupus,
vasculitis
or other autoimmune diseases, we have now evaluated the function of patients' immune systems. Serum concentrations of one to three IgG subclasses were decreased in 10 of the 12 patients studied. Antibody titres against diphtheria, tetanus and
Haemophilus
influenzae (Hib) were below the detection limit of the assay in four, three and eight of the 11 patients examined, respectively. (Re)vaccination of these 11 patients led to satisfactory responses against tetanus, but two patients still failed to develop measurable antibodies against diphtheria, two against Hib and six against one or more of the three serotypes of 23-valent pneumococcus vaccine. The proportions of T cells of all lymphocytes and the proliferative responses of the peripheral blood mononuclear cells were normal. In conclusion, humoral immune responses in some patients with LPI are defective and these patients may benefit from intravenous immunoglobulin therapy.
...
PMID:B and T cell immunity in patients with lysinuric protein intolerance. 1036 Dec 30
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