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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The cause of primary pneumonia was diagnosed in 157 of 198 children and 165 of 207 adults seen as inpatients or outpatients in a 12-month period. In children Mycoplasma pneumoniae and pneumococcus were identified in 79 and 29 cases respectively. Twenty-nine of 53 cases of
viral infection
in children were caused by respiratory syncytial virus, two-thirds of the cases occurring in children under three years of age. No children died of pneumonia. In adults pneumococcus was the most common pathogen, accounting for 81 cases. The overall mortality in adults was 7.7%. A high mortality was found in patients with
Haemophilus
influenzae and other gram-negative bacilli infections, and in elderly patients with pneumococcal pneumonia. Coagglutination was more sensitive than counterimmunoelectrophoresis for the detection of pneumococcal antigen in respiratory samples (p less than 0.001). Counterimmunoelectrophoresis was the only useful technique for detection of pneumococcal antigen in urine specimens, concentration, overnight storage at 4 degrees C and specific staining significantly increasing positivity (p less than 0.001).
...
PMID:Prospective study on the etiology of community-acquired pneumonia in children and adults in Spain. 313 33
The usefulness of a new macrolide antibiotic rokitamycin (RKM, TMS-19-Q) was evaluated in the field of pediatrics. 1. Twenty seven patients were enrolled in the study. One patient was excluded from the study because the illness was due to a
viral infection
. They included 14 boys and 13 girls with ages 7 months to 9 years 11 months. 2. The patients were treated with RKM at daily doses ranging 19.2-41.1 mg/kg, divided into 3 equal portions. The administration was done orally at fasting, lasting 2-15 days, with total doses of 22.2-500.0 mg/kg. 3. The patients were diagnostically classified into the following categories: 9 with acute pharyngitis, 15 with acute bronchitis, and one each with pneumonia, purulent lymphadenitis and Campylobacter enteritis. 4. The clinical response to the treatment was good or excellent in 22 of the patients with an overall efficacy rate of 81.5%. An efficacy rate of 88.9% was achieved for the patients with acute pharyngitis, 80.0% for those with acute bronchitis, and 100% for the patient with purulent lymphadenitis and the patient with Campylobacter enteritis. From the patient with pneumonia whose response was evaluated "fair" was
Haemophilus
influenzae isolated by culturing pharyngeal material. This organism was found resistant to RKM by the disk method. 5. Bacteriological responses were as follows; of 26 isolates presumed to be pathogens, 9 were eradicated, 5 decreased, 7 unchanged and 5 unknown, with an eradication rate of 42.9%. 6. Neither adverse reactions nor abnormal changes in laboratory findings were observed with the medication in any patients during and after the end of the treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Studies on efficacy, safety and dosage of rokitamycin in the treatment of pediatric infections]. 322 35
Ciliocytophthoria (ccp) in nasal or nasopharyngeal secretion from the patients with acute tonsillitis, acute rhinosinusitis and allergic rhinitis was studied. The ratio of the presence of ccp among acute tonsillitis, acute rhinosinusitis and allergic rhinitis was compared. Acute tonsillitis had a much more positive ccp test than other diseases. This might be related to the anatomical feature of palatine tonsil having a complicated hollow-crypt. The presence of
Haemophilus
influenzae was the most frequent in patients with positive ccp test. Further study will be necessary to determine possible relationship between
viral infection
and bacteria or endotoxin from bacteria.
...
PMID:Ciliocytophthoria (ccp) in nasopharyngeal smear from patients with acute tonsillitis. 322 46
Normally, the mucosa of the nasooropharynx, trachea, and, perhaps, the major bronchi is colonized with aerobic and anaerobic microbes. This epithelial surface coexists with the microbial flora and is not overgrown with it. Moreover, the physiologic functions of the mucosa--including a protective barrier, mucociliary clearance and humidification, and warming of respired air--are not impeded. How this flora is controlled and what is amiss when virulent or pathogenic bacteria can cause infection are fascinating questions. A balance is maintained during health in which epithelial cell integrity--a function of proper nutrition, available secretory immunoglobulins and glycoproteins, and ciliary motion--resists the microbe's attempt to attach via specialized receptors (pili) or by proteolytic destruction of local proteins. These interactions are reviewed in detail. When colonization is excessive and aspiration of more microbes into the lower airway occurs, infection is more probable. Certain bacteria such as Streptococcus pneumoniae and
Hemophilus
influenzae, which are associated with chronic bronchitis, illustrate a mechanism in which the host-microbial balance may be upset by selective impairment of a host protein, secretory IgA1. Alternatively,
viral infection
or cilotoxic microbes (mycoplasma) can favor colonization of bacteria when mucosal clearance mechanisms are impaired. Last, mucosal integrity can be breached by noxious gases or inflammation that may allow bacteria entry into the submucosal that provides a nidus for infection.
...
PMID:Bacterial adherence to respiratory tract mucosa--a dynamic interaction leading to colonization. 332 Dec 69
In influenza the combined virus-bacterial pneumonia is approximately three times more common than primary viral pneumonia. The bacteria most commonly involved are Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pneumoniae and
Haemophilus
influenzae. S. aureus co-infection is reported to have a fatality rate of up to 42% (ref. 2). It is thought that
virus infection
in the respiratory tract favours growth conditions for bacteria. In this letter data are presented which show that some S. aureus strains secrete a protease which exerts a decisive influence on the outcome of influenza
virus infection
in mice by cleavage activation of the virus haemagglutinin.
...
PMID:Role of Staphylococcus protease in the development of influenza pneumonia. 354 90
Cytotoxicity of natural and adenovirus-infected mononuclear leukocytes of healthy individuals has been examined on permanent rat kidney cell line transformed by human adenovirus DNA as target. Mononuclear leukocytes of healthy individuals are cytotoxic cells which induce an average 24.5% growth inhibition on target cells. The cytotoxic activity of cells is significantly increased by the human adenovirus infection of effector mononuclear leukocytes, while the cytotoxic effect is significantly decreased by the simultaneous application of
virus infection
and anti-adenovirus serum. The anti-serum applied simultaneously with non-infected effector cells produces an intensive cytotoxic effect on the target cell culture. Though cytotoxicity of the effector cells was increased also by phytohaemagglutinin and
Haemophilus
influenzae endotoxin treatment of mononuclear leukocytes, this effect was not significant. The effector cells were not cytotoxic for control primary rat kidney cell culture.
...
PMID:Cytotoxicity of human peripheral leukocytes on adenovirus-transformed cell culture. 356 94
Twenty-three cases of
Haemophilus
influenzae type b septic arthritis seen over a recent 5-year period are reviewed. The natural history of the disease includes a mean three days of fever and joint symptoms prior to hospitalization, often accompanied or immediately preceded by a
viral illness
and/or otitis media. Concurrent H influenzae type B meningitis was present in 30% of patients and concurrent osteomyelitis in 22%. Infants remained febrile in the hospital for a mean of 3.6 consecutive days. However, secondary and prolonged fevers were common. Clinical improvement in the joint examination was first seen at a mean of 2.5 days. Characteristic laboratory findings during recovery included a decline in total WBC count, neutrophil count, ESR, and hematocrit, with a concomitant increase in lymphocyte and platelet counts. Outpatient follow-up for a mean duration of 20 months found only two of 21 infants with residual impairment. The time to total healing in the remaining 19 infants, however, varied widely--from nine days to 17 months (mean of 4 months).
...
PMID:Haemophilus influenzae type b septic arthritis in children: report of 23 cases. 387 18
Infectious pneumonias are inflammations of the lung that can be localized in the alveoli or interstitial tissue or both. The pathogenic agent is usually airborne; more rarely it is hematogenous. Important distinctions are between bacterial and nonbacterial forms, between diseases acquired outside and inside hospitals, and between patients who are basically healthy and those with a previous illness. Pneumococci continue to be the dominant pathogens outside hospitals. In hospitals, gram-negative, anaerobic, and fungal pathogens are more often found. Usually, purulent chronic bronchitis or an acute exacerbation of chronic bronchitis is based on a prior
viral infection
or an impairment of bacterial clearance mechanisms of the respiratory tract. The dominant pathogens are
Haemophilus
influenzae and pneumococci. Worldwide, viral infections of the upper respiratory tract have great epidemiological significance. With 12 different groups of viruses and more than 150 serotypes, there can be many causes of symptoms of rhinitis, tonsillitis, pharyngitis, laryngitis, and tracheitis as well as bronchitis.
...
PMID:Respiratory infection: the disease. 407 65
An outbreak of fibrinous pleuropneumonia was observed in October 1971 in Saskatchewan on a farm of 900 feeder pigs. Morbidity and mortality were low. Pathologic-anatomic findings included fibrinous pleuritis, pulmonary vascular thrombosis and necrotizing fibrinous pneumonia.
Hemophilus
parahemolyticus was isolated from the lungs of affected animals. In addition pulmonary lesions were found which suggested an adenovirus infection. It was speculated that the
viral infection
possibly predisposed the pigs to the Hemophilus infection. The H. parahemolyticus isolate was sensitive to common antibiotics.
...
PMID:Porcine Hemophilus parahemolyticus pneumonia in Saskatchewan. I. Natural occurrence and findings. 427 28
Infant rats infected with influenza A virus, Sendai (parainfluenza 1) virus or rat coronavirus were used to determine whether
viral infection
increases the intensity of nasal colonization with
Haemophilus
influenzae type b (HIB). Intranasal inoculation of HIB in rats previously infected with each of these viruses resulted in nasal HIB titers at least 100-fold higher than those for controls during the first 2 wk after HIB inoculation, and as much as 10,000-fold higher during the first week. Children with cough, sneezing, or rhinorrhea could be effective disseminators of HIB if they were as heavily and persistently colonized as these virus-infected animals.
...
PMID:Viral enhancement of nasal colonization with Haemophilus influenzae type b in the infant rat. 630 51
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