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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Postoperative chest infection was studied prospectively in 73 patients in order to evaluate standard laboratory methods of sputum examination and to relate the results to the patients' clinical state and to antibiotic therapy. When a culture medium selective for haemophilus was used in addition to unselective media, homogenisation of the specimen gave no advantage. Laboratory and clinical findings usually corresponded well. Profuse growths of Streptococcus pneumoniae or
Haemophilus
influenzae were clearly associated with clinical evidence of
chest infection
but other Gramnegative bacilli and Staphylococcus aureus much less so. Coliforms were more prominent after antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Routine laboratory assessment of postoperative chest infection: a prospective study. 32 18
A prospective study of community acquired lower respiratory tract infection in the elderly was carried out over a 15-month period. During this time 127 consecutive admissions to two acute geriatric medical wards were studied. An aetiology was established in 77 (61%) of cases. Streptococcus pneumoniae was identified in 37% of patients.
Haemophilus
influenzae in 18% and Branhamella catarrhalis in 10%. Infection with Mycoplasma pneumoniae was found in only one episode and no cases of Legionella pneumophilia were diagnosed. A significant number of patients had multiple bacterial pathogens isolated: 18% of all bacterial pathogens isolated were ampicillin resistant. Fourteen patients died (11%).
Lower respiratory tract infection
is a frequent cause of hospital admission for those aged over 65 and is often regarded as a preterminal event. Adequately treated however, mortality is no higher than in the general population. Knowledge of the likely pathogens allows early and appropriate antibiotic therapy for these patients whether at home or on admission to hospital.
...
PMID:Prospective hospital study of community acquired lower respiratory tract infection in the elderly. 190 44
A prospective study was carried out on 75 patients undergoing pulmonary surgery to determine the relationship between perioperative lung flora and postoperative infections. Seventy-five patients having pleurectomy or pneumonectomy received cefuroxime prophylaxis; 1.5 g i.v. at induction followed by 6 further doses of 0.75 g i.v. over 48 h. Bronchoalveolar lavage samples were taken perioperatively via bronchoscopy in pleurectomy patients and from excised lung in patients undergoing lung resection. Patients were monitored for development of
chest infection
during the first 10 days after operation. Bacterial pathogens were cultured from 12 out of 54 lavage samples. The most common pathogen was
Haemophilus
influenzae and all the organisms were sensitive to cefuroxime. Eight patients (10.7%) developed postoperative
chest infection
. The likelihood of developing postoperative
chest infection
was 42% (5 out of 12 patients) in those patients whose lavage culture was positive for bacterial pathogens compared to 4.8% (2 out of 42 patients) for those whose culture was negative (chi 2 test, p less than 0.001). These results suggest that the culturing of bacterial pathogens from lavage samples from resected lung is a significant predictor of postoperative
chest infection
in patients undergoing pulmonary resection.
...
PMID:Bronchoalveolar lavage in the prediction of post-thoracotomy chest infection. 191 Aug 51
The oropharyngeal flora was determined before and after operation in 127 patients undergoing upper abdominal surgery. Swabs of the oropharynx were obtained on the day before operation and on the first, third, and fifth postoperative days. Isolation of
Haemophilus
influenzae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and coliforms was noted. In the 108 patients with the full series of throat swabs the incidence of oropharyngeal colonisation by H influenzae was 16% and was unchanged after operation. S pneumoniae was present in only 5.6 (six patients) before operation and the incidence fell to 1.9% (two patients). There was a transient rise in coliform colonisation postoperatively. Twenty four patients developed a
chest infection
. In eight a bacterial cause was established, in six H influenzae and in two S pneumoniae. There was a significant relation between the carriage of H influenzae before operation and development of a
chest infection
. H influenzae was also found more often in cigarette smokers. The presence of S pneumoniae or coliform organisms before surgery was not related to the development of infection. The high incidence of postoperative
chest infection
in cigarette smokers appears to be due in part to preoperative colonisation of the oropharynx by H influenzae.
...
PMID:Oropharyngeal flora and chest infection after upper abdominal surgery. 202 30
Fifteen per cent of patients admitted to a male general surgical ward were found to be carrying
Haemophilus
influenzae. Except for patients with chronic bronchitis, who developed an infection with the same micro-organism, carriage did not predispose patients to postoperative
chest infection
. Age, heavy smoking, and abdominal surgery increased the likelihood of respiratory infection after operation. H influenzae accounted for 58% of bacterial pathogens isolated from sputum, and most infections occurred within 48 hours of operation. Chemotyping showed that most infections were caused by different strains, and cross infection by H influenzae seemed to be rare. Cefuroxime given during anaesthesia did not prevent postoperative
chest infection
.
...
PMID:Study of postoperative chest infections with particular emphasis on those caused by Haemophilus influenzae. 348 14
All infections occurring in a busy pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) from 1982 to 1984 were characterized by site, bacteriology, acquisition status, and outcome. Standard Centers for Disease Control criteria were employed. Nine hundred sixty-five patients were admitted to the PICU. Mortality was 3.4%. Two hundred twenty-one infections occurred in 180 patients. Infection rates were 23% and 6% for total and PICU-acquired infections, respectively. Infections of the central nervous system (n = 56), lower respiratory tract (n = 53), and genitourinary tract (n = 46) made up 70% of all infections.
Haemophilus
influenzae (n = 39) was the most commonly isolated pathogen. Staphylococcus aureus (20%) and Klebsiella-Enterobacter-Serratia (18.3%) were most commonly noted in PICU-acquired infections. Twenty infected patients (11.1%) died in the PICU.
Lower respiratory tract infections
(20.5%) were associated with the highest mortality. Both PICU-acquired and community-acquired infections were associated with similar mortalities. Infected patients in a PICU have a mortality approximately 300% higher than that seen in the overall PICU population. The data presented document the importance of infection and provide information against which similar units can gauge their infection status for quality-assurance purposes.
...
PMID:Infections in a pediatric intensive care unit. 381 7
The use of many different antibiotics to treat
chest infection
has led us to test the sensitivity of 68 strains of
Haemophilus
influenzae to 15 different compounds. These included established compounds such as ampicillin and tetracycline and newer agents such as cephalosporins and clindamycin. The minimum inhibitory concentrations of the compounds for H. influenzae were then compared with blood levels attained after the usual dose regimens. There has been a significant increase in tetracycline resistance in the last few years, but all strains were sensitive to ampicillin, chloramphenicol, sulphamethoxazole, and trimethoprim, Several antibiotics were found to be microbiologically unsuitable for treating H. influenzae infections.
...
PMID:Sensitivity of Haemophilus influenzae to antibiotics. 454 25
Seventy-nine patients about to undergo cardiac operations were randomly allocated to two treatment groups in an attempt to reduce postoperative chest infections. The group receiving a short peroperative course of cefamandole, an antibiotic effective against both the pneumococcus and
Haemophilus
influenzae, had a significantly lower postoperative
chest infection
rate than the group receiving a 3-day course of cephradine, an antibiotic previously chosen to prevent intracardiac infection during the operation. By selecting an appropriate antibiotic it is possible, using a short peroperative course, to reduce the postoperative
chest infection
rate in patients undergoing cardiac operations.
...
PMID:Peroperative antibiotics in the prevention of chest infection following cardiac operations. 736 56
The relationship between intraoperative contamination of the lower respiratory tract and postoperative
chest infection
was studied in 193 patients undergoing biliary tract surgery. During surgery, sputum was obtained from the lower respiratory tract for bacteriological culture. The diagnosis of postoperative pulmonary complications was based on clinical criteria, supported by the pattern of sequential blood gas changes in the postoperative period.
Chest infection
was present in 30% of patients who harboured
Haemophilus
species in their sputum at the time of surgery compared with 10% of those with negative cultures. Contamination of the lower respiratory tract at operation by
Haemophilus
sp. is associated with development of postoperative
chest infection
.
...
PMID:The relationship between intraoperative contamination of the lower respiratory tract and postoperative chest infection. 873 5
A polymerase chain reaction-based typing method for noncapsulate
Haemophilus
influenzae was developed. Randomly amplified polymorphic DNA fingerprints were generated from boiled supernatants prepared directly from bacterial colonies without the need for DNA extraction. The technique was applied to isolates obtained during putative outbreaks of
chest infection
and validated by comparison with sodium dodecyl sulfatepolyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of outer membrane protein-enriched preparations and rRNA gene restriction analysis. There was complete concordance between the three techniques. The results show that randomly amplified polymorphic DNA analysis provides a highly discriminatory method of characterizing strains of noncapsulate H. influenzae which is eminently suitable as an epidemiological tool for the rapid investigation of outbreaks of infection.
...
PMID:Polymerase chain reaction-based strain characterization of noncapsulate Haemophilus influenzae. 826 83
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