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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A total of 94 clinical isolates of
Haemophilus
influenzae were studied to analyze the relationship of biotype to site of isolation, serotype, and pattern of antimicrobial susceptibility.
Systemic infections
were caused most commonly by biotype I, and the majority of these isolates possessed type b capsular polysaccharide. Other noncapsulated biotypes of H. influenzae, particularly biotype V, also were associated with invasive disease. Antimicrobial susceptibility testing was performed on all isolates by an agar dilution method against ampicillin, chloramphenicol, cefoxitin, rifampin, and rosoxacin, and all isolates were screened for beta-lactamase activity. Except for 15 isolates that produced beta-lactamase, no other substantial differences in antimicrobial susceptibilities among biotypes of H. influenzae were detected. Encapsulated strains of biotype I had the highest frequency of ampicillin resistance.
...
PMID:Biotypes of Haemophilus influenzae: relationship to clinical source of isolation, serotype, and antibiotic susceptibility. 633 87
The hyperimmunoglobulin E recurrent-infection syndrome (HIE) entails a disorder of recurrent bacterial infections of the skin and sinopulmonary tract commencing in infancy or early childhood in the presence of serum levels of IgE which are at least 10 times normal (greater than 2,000 IU/ml). Variable concomitants of HIE are coarse facies, chronic eczematoid rashes, cold cutaneous abscesses, mild eosinophilia, mucocutaneous candidiasis, and a neutrophil chemotactic defect. The bacteria which commonly infect these patients are Staphylococcus aureus and
Haemophilus
influenzae although Streptococcus pneumoniae and enteric gram-negative rods are seen in some cases. Other than pneumonias, deep-seated infections are unusual, although osteomyelitis, arthritis, and visceral abscesses are seen. Bacteremia and
sepsis
are rare. Therapy should involve prolonged intravenous antibiotics and early surgery to treat infections which usually seem deceptively benign. HIE patients' neutrophils display a variable chemotactic defect, and their mononuclear cells variably produce an inhibitor of neutrophil chemotaxis. The production of the inhibitor correlates with the in vitro chemotactic defect. The basis of the propensity for recurrent infections is still speculative, and the further study of this syndrome should add new dimensions to our understanding of host defenses against bacterial invaders.
...
PMID:The hyperimmunoglobulin E recurrent-infection (Job's) syndrome. A review of the NIH experience and the literature. 634 70
To determine the etiology of apparent meningococcemia, all cases of
sepsis
with coagulopathy, purpura, and/or adrenal hemorrhage (Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome) with and without shock occurring over a 12-year period were reviewed. A total of 42 cases were identified; 30 cases were caused by Neisseria meningitidis and 12 cases were caused by
Haemophilus
influenzae. Compared with patients with disease caused by H influenzae, patients with meningococcal disease were older, more often male, more often contracted the disease in winter-spring, and had a longer duration of antecedent symptoms; however, none of these differences was statistically significant. All patients were febrile (greater than 38 degrees C) and appeared toxic. Similar proportions in each group had shock and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy at the time of admission. Ten of 12 patients with H influenzae infection compared with 15/30 (P less than .05) with meningococcal infection were lethargic or comatose at the time of admission. Nine of 12 patients with H influenzae infection died compared with 5/30 with meningococcal disease (P less than .005); the mean time from onset of symptoms to death with H influenzae infection (20.7 +/- 11.4 [SE] hours) was significantly shorter (P less than .05) than with meningococcal infection (120 +/- 74.4 hours). Children with clinical signs of
sepsis
and with purpura, petechiae, or coagulopathy may have N meningitidis or H influenzae as etiologic agents. Initial antibiotic therapy should be directed against these pathogens.
...
PMID:Apparent meningococcemia: clinical features of disease due to Haemophilus influenzae and Neisseria meningitidis. 641 7
The Wellcogen
Haemophilus
influenzae b, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Neisseria meningitidis (ACYW135) latex agglutination tests (Wellcome Diagnostics, Dartford, England) were evaluated as methods to detect bacterial antigens in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), urine, and serum from patients with meningitis or
sepsis
. Antigen was detected in 92% of CSFs from H. influenzae b, 100% of CSFs from N. meningitidis groups A and Y, 36% of CSFs from N. meningitidis group C, and 69% of CSFs from pneumococcal meningitidis patients. Serum samples presented a problem, with a few false-positive or possible cross-reactions. The Wellcogen latex agglutination tests were more sensitive than the Bactogen (H. influenzae type b) latex agglutination test and the Phadebact (S. pneumoniae) coagglutination test.
...
PMID:Detection of bacterial antigens in body fluids with the Wellcogen Haemophilus influenzae b, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Neisseria meningitidis (ACYW135) latex agglutination tests. 641 59
This is a study of 234 children and young adult patients entered in the Intergroup Hodgkin's Disease in Childhood (stage I-II) Study from November 1975 to June 1981 and followed for a mean of 3.8 years after laparotomy. All patients had a staging laparotomy with total splenectomy, liver biopsy, and sampling of abdominal lymph node groups. Four patients (1.7%) have had documented
sepsis
, and three have had possible
sepsis
. There has been no
sepsis
-related death. Intestinal obstruction requiring operation was noted in four patients (no intestinal resection required). Urgent operation was necessary in two patients, one with ureteral obstruction and one with ovarian torsion, following a repositioning procedure, neither of these patients died. Organisms in the four patients with positive blood cultures were Streptococcus pneumoniae (two) and
Haemophilus
influenzae (two). Of the 234 patients in the study, 194 (83%) had received polyvalent pneumococcal vaccine, and 174 (74%) were taking prophylactic antibiotics. One of the two patients with pneumococcal
sepsis
had not been vaccinated, and the second was vaccinated only during radiotherapy. Only one of the four patients with positive blood cultures was on a prophylactic antibiotic treatment regimen at the time of the septic episode. The liabilities in employing laparotomy-splenectomy for the evaluation of pediatric patients with Hodgkin's disease include both general surgical complications and an increase in the risk of hyperacute infection, specifically related to encapsulated species. The latter appears to be modified to a major degree by current prophylactic measures or therapy.
...
PMID:Complications related to 234 staging laparotomies performed in the Intergroup Hodgkin's Disease in Childhood study. 647 52
Single-dose pharmacokinetic studies were performed in 64 infants, ranging in age from less than 1 day to 6 days, after intravenous infusion or intramuscular injection of approximately 75 mg/kg of mezlocillin. Mean serum concentrations at one hour were 107 micrograms/ml and 82.5 micrograms/ml for neonates less than or equal to 1 day of age and greater than or equal to 6 days of age, respectively. The serum clearance ranged from 3.0 to 6.4 hours. Based on data from the study, it is recommended that mezlocillin be administered to neonates with gram-negative bacterial infections in a single dose of 75 mg/kg, either as an intravenous infusion over 30 minutes or as an intramuscular injection, every 12 hours during the first week of life. Mezlocillin alone or in conjunction with penicillin was used in treating 165 neonates with suspected
sepsis
. Gram-negative organisms were recovered from 18 of the 27 neonates from whom pathogens were isolated. Three of these 18 strains, a Klebsiella oxytoca, an Acinetobacter anitratum, and a
Haemophilus
influenzae, were resistant to mezlocillin in vitro. Twenty-four of the 27 patients who satisfied criteria for evaluation achieved a bacteriological and a clinical cure. Cerebrospinal fluid permeation after multiple doses ranged from 18% to 45% of serum levels. No significant local or systemic side effects were seen. The results indicate that mezlocillin is an effective ureidopenicillin for the treatment of gram-negative bacterial infections.
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation of mezlocillin in neonates. 647 69
Three grams of amoxycillin administered twice daily for seven days, as an oral powder (Amoxil 3G sachets, Bencard) dispersed in water, to 17 patients with bronchiectasis resulted in striking clinical, spirometric and bacteriological improvement in 11 of 12 patients who were producing purulent sputum from which
Haemophilus
influenzae was cultured by a selective bacteriological technique (Roberts & Cole, 1980). In the five patients from whose sputum this organism could not be cultured, and in one from whom it could, there was no improvement. Untoward effects were limited to nausea in one patient and acceptability of the regimen by the remaining patients was unanimous. There was no evidence of accumulation of the drug in serum or sputum. The rapidity of effect and oral form of the treatment suggest that it may provide a simple out-patient regimen for chronic bronchial
sepsis
and severe purulent exacerbations of chronic bronchitis from which H. influenzae can be cultured.
...
PMID:A simple oral antimicrobial regimen effective in severe chronic bronchial suppuration associated with culturable Haemophilus influenzae. 660 Nov 2
Since 1971 we have seen 15 children with the diagnosis of purulent pericarditis. The causative organism was
Hemophilus
influenzae in seven, Staphylococcus aureus in three, and five were due to other organisms. In one child the diagnosis was unsuspected until autopsy. The other 14 patients were all treated with intravenous antibiotics to which the organism was sensitive. One child had an immediate pericardiectomy because of tamponade. The other 13 patients had pericardiocentesis for diagnosis and initial therapy. Pericardiocentesis alone resulted in recovery of four patients and failed in nine, including all seven patients with H. influenzae. These nine had recurrent tamponade or a persistent picture of
sepsis
that was unresponsive to repeated pericardiocenteses and necessitated operative intervention. The procedure used was subxiphoid tube drainage in two patients. One recovered and the other required further operation. The remaining seven patients were treated with pericardiectomy. All pericardiectomy patients recovered without complications or recurrent symptoms. Survivors are asymptomatic with no evidence of pericardial constriction. We recommend immediate pericardiocentesis for diagnosis and initial therapy. Early pericardiectomy should be performed if the causative organism is H. influenzae, if tamponade occurs after initial pericardiocentesis, or if fever persists despite appropriate antibiotics.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of purulent pericarditis in children. 660 Dec 11
The bactericidal activities of human complement and human antibody directed against specific
Haemophilus
influenzae type b cell surface determinants were investigated. Strain Eagan, a laboratory isolate, and strain Kn, a clinical isolate, were used as the test organisms and gave qualitatively similar results. In the absence of antibody, both isolates were resistant to killing by 60% agammaglobulinemic serum (AGS) containing normal complement levels. The addition of affinity-purified immunoglobulin G anticapsular antibody was bactericidal with 15% AGS as the complement source. Bactericidal activity was also demonstrated with this antibody when the complement source was AGS-Mg-EGTA [ethylene glycol-bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N-tetraacetic acid], C2-deficient human serum (alternative complement pathway), or AGS in which factor D and properdin had been selectively inactivated (classical pathway). Immunoglobulin G fractions from a human serum pool or from serum from an adult who had recovered from H. influenzae type b (Kn)
sepsis
were absorbed to remove anticapsular antibody. The absorbed fractions containing noncapsular antibodies also activated complement-dependent bactericidal activity. But, in contrast to the results with anticapsular antibody, noncapsular antibodies did not elicit alternative pathway bactericidal activity. Incubation of cells of H. influenzae type b in C2-deficient serum or AGS-Mg-EGTA did not cause complement consumption (total hemolytic complement and C3). The addition of immunoglobulin G anticapsular antibody (but not noncapsular antibody) increased consumption of total complement and C3, paralleling the results of the bactericidal assays. These studies demonstrated an absolute requirement for anticapsular antibody in alternative pathway activation and killing of H. influenzae type b.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Antibody-dependent alternative pathway killing of Haemophilus influenzae type b. 660 28
Polyvalent pneumococcal vaccine and oral penicillin prophylaxis are frequently used in patients with functional or anatomic asplenia to protect them from fulminant Streptococcus pneumoniae
sepsis
. We studied nasopharyngeal colonization with pneumococci in 34 patients with sickle cell anemia (aged 6 months to 5 years) receiving penicillin prophylaxis and in 63 age- and race-matched comparison patients. Patients with sickle cell anemia had fewer positive initial pneumococcal nasopharyngeal cultures than did the comparison group (14.5% vs 34.4%, P = 0.03) and significantly lower carriage rates during the respiratory illness season of November to March (8.7% vs 40.5%, P = 0.005). Penicillin prophylaxis did not result in emergence of penicillin-resistant pneumococci or in an increased carriage rate of
Haemophilus
influenzae type b. Our data suggest a mechanism of action for penicillin prophylaxis and provide some evidence for the relative safety of this regimen.
...
PMID:Effect of penicillin prophylaxis on nasopharyngeal colonization with Streptococcus pneumoniae in children with sickle cell anemia. 669 Jun 71
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