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)

Fifty children aged 1 to 13 years with chronic or recurrent otitis media with effusion received a single dose of cefaclor (15 mg/kg body weight) by the oral route 30 minutes to seven hours before the removal of middle ear effusion and insertion of tympanostomy tubes. Serum and middle ear aspirate concentrations of the antibiotic were determined employing a microbiological assay technique by a disk diffusion method. Middle ear specimens were also cultured for aerobic bacteria. The mean peak serum concentration level (8.49 +/- 7.89 micrograms/ml) was observed after 30 minutes, whereas the middle ear peak level (0.47 +/- 0.78 micrograms/ml) occurred after one hour. Of the 87 middle ear specimens, 37 had cefaclor concentrations which were detectable within the resolution of the bioassay method (greater than 0.16 micrograms/ml). There was no correlation between the type of middle ear effusion (mucoid or serous) and the concentration of cefaclor in the middle ear. Only 18% of the middle ear cultures were positive for aerobic bacteria; Hemophilus influenzae was the most common organism.
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PMID:Pharmacokinetics of cefaclor in chronic middle ear effusions. 679 62

Middle ear fluid (MEF) aspirates and nasal swabs of children with acute otitis media (N = 255, age 2-6 yrs) were cultured by standard bacteriological methods. In addition, counterimmunoelectrophoresis and latex agglutination were applied to detect pneumococcal polysaccharide antigens (Pn-ag) in MEF. When the nasal culture grew Streptococcus pneumoniae (Pn), Pn was also present in 49% (73/148) and Pn-ag in 64% of the MEF cultures. If Haemophilus influenzae (Hi) appeared in the nasal culture. Hi was present in 41% (25/61) of the MEFs. There was a negative correlation between the growth of Pn or Hi in the nasal culture and the presence of other bacteria in the MEF. However, in spite of these correlations the nasal culture was concluded not to be useful in predicting the MEF bacteria.
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PMID:Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae in nasal cultures during acute otitis media. 697 86

In this prospective study tympanocentesis was performed to determine the pathogens isolated from middle ear fluid of 200 ears in 137 children with acute otitis media (AOM) which had not responded after one or two empiric antimicrobial treatment courses (termed persistent AOM). For comparison tympanocentesis from 154 ears in 111 children with AOM not previously treated are described. Patients were enrolled from October, 1989, until September, 1992. In the persistent AOM group amoxicillin and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole were the most frequently used antimicrobials before tympanocentesis. Middle ear aspirates produced no pathogenic bacterial growth in 49% of persistent AOM patients, Streptococcus pneumoniae in 24%, Haemophilus influenzae in 7%, Branhamella catarrhalis in 7%, Streptococcus pyogenes in 6%, Staphylococcus aureus in 5% and two pathogens in 3%. Two (18%) of 11 S. pneumoniae isolates tested were penicillin-resistant; 1 was intermediate and 1 was highly resistant. Ten (83%) of 12 H. influenzae and all of 11 B. catarrhalis AOM isolates produced beta-lactamase. In comparison previously untreated AOM patients produced no bacterial growth from tympanocentesis in 30%, S. pneumoniae in 36% (8% penicillin-resistant), H. influenaze in 13% (44% beta-lactamase-producing) and B. catarrhalis in 11% (85% beta-lactamase producing). AOM which is persistent after initial empiric antimicrobial therapy may be caused by middle ear inflammation after bacteria are killed or involve penicillin-resistant S. pneumoniae, beta-lactamase-producing H. influenzae or B. catarrhalis more commonly than occurs in AOM which has not been recently treated.
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PMID:Persistent acute otitis media: I. Causative pathogens. 776 Nov 81

The gram negative bacteria, nontypable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) was used to induce otitis media in a total of 18 chinchillas. Three days post-inoculation, three cohorts of 6 chinchillas each were treated daily for four days with either ceftriaxone, chloramphenicol, or diluent without antibiotics. Middle ear fluid (MEF) was obtained daily, assayed for endotoxin content by means of the chromogenic limulus amebocyte lysate assay, and concentration of the NTHi/mL MEF determined by standard plate count. The endotoxin concentration per mL MEF from both the antibiotic treated cohorts decreased during the observation period, but increased in the MEF of the untreated control group. The data indicate that, unlike the dramatic increase in endotoxin concentration, after antibiotic treatment in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) during experimental Haemophilus influenzae-induced meningitis, there is no demonstrable sustained release of endotoxin in the middle ear subsequent to antibiotic treatment during experimental otitis media.
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PMID:The effect of antibiotic treatment on the release of endotoxin during nontypable Haemophilus influenzae-induced otitis media in the chinchilla. 903 90

Bacteriologic response to cefuroxime axetil and cefaclor administered for 10 days was evaluated in acute otitis media (AOM) in patients aged 6-36 months. Middle ear fluid culture was obtained by tympanocentesis before treatment, on day 4 or 5 after initiation of treatment, and if clinical relapse occurred before day 17. Bacteriologic failure was observed in 32% of patients receiving cefaclor versus 15% of patients receiving cefuroxime axetil (P = .009). Failure rates increased with increasing MIC: For Streptococcus pneumoniae, 0.5 microg/mL (established as cutoff value for cefuroxime by the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards [NCCLS]) discriminated between success and failure. For Haemophilus influenzae, high failure rates were observed for cefaclor, even with low MICs (< or = 1.0 microg/mL), and with both drugs they tended to increase with increasing MIC, even for values below the cutoff suggested by the NCCLS (8.0 and 4.0 microg/mL for cefaclor and cefuroxime, respectively). Thus, for AOM caused by H. influenzae, lower susceptibility cutoff levels for MICs should be established.
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PMID:Bacteriologic response to oral cephalosporins: are established susceptibility breakpoints appropriate in the case of acute otitis media? 978 Feb 87

In an ongoing prospective study, IL-1 concentrations were measured in 78 children (aged 3-36 months) with acute otitis media receiving antibiotics. Middle ear fluid IL-1 concentrations were determined using ELISA kits. Ninety-eight middle ear fluid samples were obtained by tympanocentesis at enrollment (day 1) and 43 samples were collected on days 4-5. Ninety-two pathogens were isolated in 77/98 samples obtained on day 1: 55 Haemophilus influenzae, 34 Streptococcus pneumoniae, 2 Moraxella catarrhalis and 1 Streptococcus pyogenes. Among 37 paired samples initially culture-positive, eradication of the pathogen was achieved on day 4-5 in 20 while pathogens were still present in 17. On day 1, IL-1 was detected in 61/77 (79%) culture-positive samples vs 9/21 (43%) culture-negative ones (P = 0.003). The mean +/- SD middle ear fluid concentration of IL-1 on day 1 was significantly higher in culture-positive (316 +/- 508 pg/ml) than in culture-negative samples (111 +/- 245 pg/ml) (P = 0.01). When paired samples were evaluated, IL-1 decreased on days 4-5 in 13/20 (65%) ears where bacterial eradication was achieved, but also in 11/19 (58%) with persistent or new infection. The mean IL-1 concentrations decreased on days 4-5 in the 20 samples from ears where bacterial eradication was achieved (330 +/- 460 vs 118 +/- 294 pg/ml, P = 0.1) but also in the 17 samples where it was not (465 +/- 660 vs 232 +/- 289 pg/ml, P = 0.02). No significant differences were found between day 1 and days 4-5 in the mean IL-1 concentrations measured in patients with H. influenzae vs S. pneumoniae or concomitant H. influenzae and S. pneumoniae. It was concluded that: 1) IL-1 was detected in the middle ear fluid of most patients with acute otitis media; 2) significantly higher IL-1 concentrations were found in patients with culture-positive than in those with culture-negative acute otits media; 3) IL-1 concentrations decreased on days 4-5 of antibiotic therapy, whether the pathogen was eradicated or not.
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PMID:Dynamics of interleukin-1 production in middle ear fluid during acute otitis media treated with antibiotics. 1037 27

This study examined the bacterial pathogens and the presence of possible risk factors for the development of chronic otitis media with effusion (OME) in a group of Alaska Native children. Middle ear aspirates were collected from 128 children < 6 years of age requiring tympanocentesis between 1987 and 1989. Bacterial pathogens were cultured from 40% of 209 fluids. Predominant isolates, after contamination of the outer ear was controlled for, were Haemophilus influenzae (21%; 84% of these were nontypeable), Streptococcus pneumoniae (8.1%; serotypes 6B, 10A, 11A, 14, 18B, 18C, 19A, and 23F), Staphylococcus epidermidis (3.8%), and Moraxella (Brahmanella) catarrhalis (2.9%). Pneumococcal-C-polysaccharide (PnC) was detectable in 3 of 135 (2.2%) aspirates that did not grow Streptococcus pneumoniae. Combining culture and PnC assay results evidence of pneumococcal infection was found in almost 10% of aspirates tested. There was not a significant difference in the number of episodes of acute otitis media after the first year of life based on the age at the first episode (< 6 mo, > or = 6 mo). However, 88% of infants in the study had their first acute otitis media episode before 1 year of age.
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PMID:Bacterial pathogens in chronic otitis media with effusion in Alaska Native children. 1043 43

This study was performed to determine the prevalence of resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae, Haemophilus influenzae, and Moraxella catarrhalis isolated from middle ear fluid of children undergoing placement of ventilation tubes. The extent of resistance to commonly prescribed antibiotics and the risk factors associated with this resistance were also examined. Children who had fluid present in their middle ears at the time of ventilation tube placement from May 1996 to May 1997 were included in the study. Middle ear fluid was plated onto culture media in the operating room, and antimicrobial resistance of cultured organisms was ascertained. Risk factors for this resistance were determined from the medical history and analyzed. Cultures of 244 patients (355 ears) were positive for organisms in 29.6%. Penicillin resistance was found in 38.2% of S pneumoniae cultures. Beta-lactamase production was found in 65.1% and 100% of H influenzae and M catarrhalis specimens, respectively. Risk factor analysis revealed young age, day care attendance, and number of antibiotic courses to most reliably predict the presence of resistant microorganisms.
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PMID:Resistant bacteria in middle ear fluid at the time of tympanotomy tube surgery. 1065 7

To identify potential immunodominant and/or adhesin binding domains of the outer membrane protein P5-homologous fimbrin adhesin of nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHI), three sets of synthetic peptides were synthesized and assayed in an adherence inhibition assay, by Western blotting, and in a biomolecular interaction analysis (BIA) system. The first series of 34 8- to 10-mer peptides represented the entire mature protein sequentially. The second set of four peptides (each 19 to 28 residues) represented the four predicted major surface-exposed regions (or loops) of this adhesin. The third series of seven peptides (each 27 to 34 residues) were specifically designed to map the third surface-exposed region. Data obtained by BIA indicated limited reactivity of a panel of high-titered immune chinchilla sera to the 8- to 10-mer peptides representing the mature protein, likely because these linear peptides did not represent continuous epitopes. However, several of these short peptides did inhibit adherence of multiple NTHI strains to a human respiratory epithelial cell. Overall, greatest relative reactivity in both BIA and adherence inhibition assays was demonstrated against, or shown by, peptides mapping to the third and fourth predicted surface-exposed regions of this adhesin, thereby indicating the presence of immunodominant and adhesin binding domains at these sites. Middle ear fluids sequentially recovered from a chinchilla with an ongoing NTHI-induced otitis media (OM) as well as sera from children with OM due to NTHI also reacted exclusively with peptides representing the third and fourth surface-exposed regions of the P5-fimbrin adhesin, indicating a similarity in immune recognition of this bacterial protein by these two hosts. Collectively, these data together with the previously demonstrated protective efficacy of immunogens derived from this adhesin in chinchilla models support the continued development of P5-fimbrin based vaccine components.
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PMID:Epitope mapping of the outer membrane protein P5-homologous fimbrin adhesin of nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae. 1072 9

Bony tissues are integral parts of the function of the middle ear and the protection of adjacent vital structures. To explore the reaction of middle ear bone to acute otitis media, rats were challenged with Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae. Local changes were monitored for up to 1 month. After reverse transcription, competitive polymerase chain reaction was used to determine the expression levels of two molecular markers of bone formation, osteocalcin and procollagen I, and the two cytokines interleukin (IL)-6 and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, in the bone. Middle ear bone responded rapidly to bacterial challenge, and the reaction depended upon the causative agent. On day 1, IL-6 and TNF-alpha transcripts were detected in the bone from all middle ears. After a short period of decreased expression of osteocalcin, during which the otitis diagnosis could not be made clinically, the levels of bone formation markers increased dramatically. The maximum levels of these markers were reached on days 6 and 14 for animals challenged with H. influenzae and pneumococci, respectively. Infections induced by pneumococci had a longer duration, and after the initial phase the production of osteocalcin and procollagen transcript were significantly higher in the pneumococcus-infected animals. The results indicate that even in an uncomplicated infection, the bone of the bulla reacts to an acute otitis media with a short period of inhibited osteoblast activity followed by a longer period of new bone formation.
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PMID:Expression of molecular markers for bone formation increases during experimental acute otitis media. 1127 36


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