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)

Upper and lower respiratory tract infections are the most frequently reported pathologies both in children and in adults. In particular, the most common clinical pictures are otitis media, principally chronic, and acute and chronic sinusitis. The microbiology of otitis media, which has been investigated thoroughly in the last year, confirmed a bacterial origin in 90% of the cases (while the incidence of the viral form is low). The etiologic agents responsible for chronic infections are Gram-negative bacteria, staphylococci and anaerobic bacteria, while in the acute forms, which are rare in adults but frequent in children, the responsible pathogens are principally Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococcus pyogenes and Branhamella catarrhalis. Among the etiologic agents of chronic sinusitis, which, from a clinical point of view, is the most frequently observed, there are staphylococci, Streptococcus pyogenes and many anaerobic bacteria. As regards lower respiratory tract infections, chronic bronchitis is the most frequent pathology in adults. But, in this case, the etiologic agents are more difficult to identify. Analysing the above-mentioned clinical pictures and their relevant etiologic agents, among the different therapeutic proposals, one of the most innovative and recent is represented by azithromycin. Azithromycin is the first of a new class of macrolides termed "Azalides" which shows particular microbiological and pharmacokinetic characteristics. As compared to other macrolides, it has an higher distribution volume, a longer half-life, a deeper intracellular penetration and a wider spectrum of action. It is rapidly concentrated in leukocytes PMN, monocytes, macrophages and fibroblasts and slowly released by these cells to the infected tissues. Azithromycin concentrations in tissues and sites of infection can be increased by the phagocyte uptake.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The etiology of bacterial respiratory infections in adulthood]. 129 1

To determine the bacteriologic cause of acute sinusitis, a sample of sinus secretions must be obtained from one of the paranasal sinuses without contamination by normal respiratory or oral flora that colonize mucosal surfaces. When maxillary sinus aspiration is performed on children who have signs and symptoms of acute sinusitis, bacteria are recovered in high density from 70%. In patients with acute, subacute, or chronic sinusitis who are generally well except for persistent respiratory symptoms, of nasal discharge or cough or both, the usual bacterial isolates are Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, an Moraxella catarrhalis. In contrast, anaerobic organisms and staphylococci should be suspected in patients who have very long-standing symptoms or in those whose symptoms are so severe or complicated that sinus surgery is undertaken.
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PMID:Microbiology of acute and chronic sinusitis in children. 152 36

Sinusitis is a common disease. Most cases of acute sinusitis involve the maxillary sinus and occur after viral infections of the upper respiratory tract. The usual pathogens are Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae. Moraxella (Branhamella) catarrhalis is also an important pathogen in children. Anaerobic infections are more common in chronic sinusitis. Fungi are frequently observed in granulocytopenic cancer patients but also can occur in apparently normal hosts. Many strains of H influenzae and M catarrhalis observed in patients with sinusitis produce beta-lactamases. Many antimicrobial regimens have proven successful in the treatment of sinusitis, including ampicillin, amoxicillin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, the tetracyclines, and cefuroxime axetil, but only the latter three drugs are active against most beta-lactamase-producing strains. Nosocomial sinusitis usually occurs in intensive care unit settings and is frequently associated with nasopharyngeal instrumentation. The pathogens observed in nosocomial sinusitis are gram-negative bacilli or staphylococci and frequently require therapy with broad-spectrum penicillins or cephalosporins, an aminoglycoside, or vancomycin.
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PMID:Antimicrobial treatment of sinusitis. 177 6

In a prospective study, patients with the diagnosis of chronic ethmoid sinusitis were evaluated microbiologically by using biopsy specimens of the ethmoid sinus mucosa. Microbiology cultures were performed on 94 specimens from 59 patients. Staphylococcus aureus and members of the family Enterobacteriaceae were the most frequent classical pathogenic bacteria isolated. Coagulase-negative staphylococci were the most common overall isolates. Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae were infrequent isolates. No anaerobes, viruses, or Chlamydia trachomatis organisms were identified. Results of this study showed organism isolation frequencies different from those found in other studies of chronic sinusitis reported in the literature. The predominance of S. aureus and members of the family Enterobacteriaceae could have an effect on the antimicrobial therapy for chronic ethmoid sinusitis.
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PMID:Evaluation of the microbiology of chronic ethmoid sinusitis. 177 42

To better understand the factors involved in chronic sinusitis in childhood, we cultured the sinuses, middle meatus, and nasopharynx in 39 children requiring surgical intervention. Sixty-nine percent of these patients had other medical problems, including asthma (49%) and immunologic compromise (18%). We cultured coagulase-negative staphylococcus in 18 patients, Streptococcus viridans in 14 patients, normal flora in 10 patients, Staphylococcus aureus in nine patients, group D streptococcus in five patients, Corynebacterium in five patients, Haemophilus influenzae in three patients, Neisseria in three patients, and Streptococcus pneumoniae, group A streptococcus, Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella oxytoca, Propionibacterium acnes, Actinomyces, and an anaerobic gram-negative bacillus in one patient each. Cultures yielded no growth in nine patients. A strong association between cultures of the middle meatus obtained ipsilaterally and cultures of the maxillary (83%) and ethmoid sinuses (80%) occurred. A poor correlation was found between cultures of the nasopharynx and maxillary (45%) and ethmoid sinuses (49%). All seven patients who had both maxillary and ethmoid sinus cultures showed the same organisms in both sinuses. Only 41% of organisms were found on both sides when procedures were performed bilaterally. Cultures of the middle meatus appear to be sensitive and specific for organisms within sinuses. The presence of predominantly nonvirulent organisms in low titers suggests that additional factors other than bacterial overgrowth contribute to the pathogenesis of chronic sinusitis in children.
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PMID:Microbiology of chronic sinusitis in children. 191 Jul 29

Cultures from 105 children with chronic sinusitis who had failed aggressive medical management were retrospectively studied. Patients with immunodeficiency and cystic fibrosis were excluded from the study. Because the most common sites of disease were the infundibula and anterior ethmoid sinuses, samples of mucosa removed from the anterior ethmoid bullae during endoscopic ethmoidectomy were routinely cultured for aerobic and anaerobic organisms. Fungal cultures were performed for 55 bullae. The principal organisms isolated were alpha-hemolytic Streptococcus, Staphylococcus aureus, Moraxella catarrhalis, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Haemophilus influenzae non-type B. Only 12 anaerobic organisms and four fungi were isolated. Of the 204 bullae cultured, multiple organisms were found in 61 bullae and 40 showed no growth. Isolates of other less common organisms were also found. These data are analyzed on the basis of age and duration of symptoms, and antibiotic treatment is described.
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PMID:Bacteriology of the ethmoid bullae in children with chronic sinusitis. 199 Oct 59

Sixty-one patients with chronic sinusitis who were referred for an allergy evaluation were evaluated for immunologic competence including assessment of quantitative serum immunoglobulin levels, IgG subclass levels, and response to pneumococcal and Haemophilus influenzae vaccines. In addition to chronic sinus disease, recurrent otitis media and asthma exacerbation were common problems in this group. Five patients had an elevated age-adjusted IgE level and 22 patients had positive prick tests to one or more environmental inhalants; these findings suggest an allergic component in this subgroup. Twelve additional patients had highly reactive intradermal tests to common environmental allergens, which also may be clinically significant for underlying atopy. Eleven patients had low immunoglobulin levels, 6 had low immunoglobulin levels and vaccine hyporesponsiveness, and 17 had poor vaccine response only. Thus, 34 of 61 patients with refractory sinusitis had abnormal results on immune studies, with depressed IgG3 levels and poor response to pneumococcal antigen 7 being most common. In addition to allergy, immunologic incompetence may be an important etiologic factor in patients with chronic, refractory sinusitis.
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PMID:Immunologic defects in patients with refractory sinusitis. 194 19

One hundred fifty-four children with recurrent or chronic infections of the lower respiratory tract compatible with the diagnosis of primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) were evaluated for the presence of ultrastructural ciliary abnormalities. Studies were performed on multiple samples of respiratory mucosa obtained by nasal and bronchial brushing. Twenty-eight children showed ultrastructural ciliary defects compatible with the diagnosis of PCD: Twenty-four presented dynein arm deficiency (either as isolated defect or in association with microtubular abnormalities), two had ciliary aplasia, and two showed microtubular abnormalities. Eleven patients with PCD had situs viscerum inversus, bronchiectasis, and chronic sinusitis (Kartagener's syndrome); one child with Kartagener's syndrome had normal ciliary structure. The appearance of respiratory symptoms within the first month of life, the colonization by Haemophilus influenzae, and a history of recurrent rhinitis and otitis were characteristically present in children with PCD. The clinical status of those patients who reached adolescence was, in our experience, remarkably good. An early diagnosis with adequate prevention and therapy of respiratory infections may have an important role in minimizing irreversible lung damage.
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PMID:Ultrastructural ciliary defects in children with recurrent infections of the lower respiratory tract. 200 40

Since mucosal colonization may be an important determinant in the pathogenesis of otitis media with effusion (OME), we studied the adherence of Haemophilus influenzae (HI) to human nasal, nasopharyngeal, and buccal mucosal cells obtained from patients with OME. Non-typeable HI adhered in significantly greater numbers than type b HI. HI bacteria adhered to both nasal and nasopharyngeal mucosal cells in significantly greater numbers than to buccal ones. Non-typeable HI adhered to the epithelial cells from children with chronic sinusitis in more significant numbers than did those from children without chronic sinusitis. These results indicate that non-typeable HI adhere more readily to epithelial cells and that the nasal and nasopharyngeal mucosa may be an important route for HI infection in OME.
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PMID:Adherence of Haemophilus influenzae to nasal, nasopharyngeal and buccal epithelial cells from patients with otitis media. 231 60

We evaluated laboratory and radiological findings and examined tracheobronchial cilia by transmission electron microscopy in 9 patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), in order to elucidate the clinical pictures of PCD and the relationship between PCD and diffuse panbronchiolitis (DPB) which was proposed as a new disease entity in Japan in 1969. The clinical pictures of our PCD patients were almost the same as that already described in several articles in Europe and North America; early onset of respiratory symptoms, high incidence of chronic sinusitis and otitis media exudative as well as infertility, continuous infections in the lower respiratory tracts (Hemophilus influenzae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa etc.). Tracheobronchial cilia obtained by brushing technique were immotile (6 out of 8 patients) or dyskinetic (2 out of 8 patients). Ultrastructural study of cilia revealed the lack of dynein arms in all patients: the lack of both outer and inner arms (4 patients), the lack of outer arms (2 patients), the lack of inner arms (2 patients). Chest X-ray films revealed situs inversus in six out of nine patients. According to the radiological findings (chest X-ray film, CT-scan, bronchogram), the patients were divided into three groups; I: localized bronchiectasis (5 patients), II: diffuse micronodular lesions without definite bronchiectasis (3 patients), III: diffuse micronodular lesions with bronchiectasis (1 patient). Two patients of the second group satisfied the clinical diagnostic criteria for DPB (Chest 83:63, 1983). In conclusion, PCD can cause a variety of respiratory tract lesions such as bronchiectasis, DPB and other types of peripheral airway disorders.
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PMID:[Clinical and ultrastructural study on primary ciliary dyskinesia]. 235 99


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