Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fifty-two episodes of fever, chest pain, increased leukocytosis, and pulmonary infiltrate ("acute chest syndrome") were studied in 28 adults with sickle cell anemia. Possible bacterial pathogens were identified in sputum cultures from less than half of the episodes; no pneumococci were found, and Staphylocococcus aureus was the only bacterium associated with a longer illness than that seen when only normal flora were recovered. Much disease diagnosed as "pneumonia" in adults with sickle cell anemia is probably pulmonary infarction. Many of these patients will recover with no more than modest supportive care; if antibiotics are used they should be directed against S aureus (and possibly
Hemophilus
species). Pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine has great potential for preventing life-threatening infection in children with sickle cell anemia, but may not change the incidence or severity of the
acute chest syndrome
in adults.
...
PMID:"Acute chest syndrome" in adults with sickle cell anemia. Microbiology, treatment, and prevention. 3 55
Within the Cooperative Study of Sickle Cell Disease, 694 infants with confirmed sickle cell disease were enrolled at less than 6 months of age. Information about the nature and frequency of complications was collected prospectively over a 10-year period. Painful crises and
acute chest syndrome
were the most common sickle cell-related events in homozygous sickle cell anemia (SS), hemoglobin SC disease (SC), and S beta thalassemia patients (overall incidence in SS patients of 32.4 and 24.5 cases per 100 person-years, respectively). Bacteremia occurred most frequently in SS children under 4 years of age and in SC patients less than 2 years of age. The mortality rate was low in this cohort compared with that found in previous reports. Twenty children, all with Hb SS, died (1.1 deaths per 100 person-years among SS patients). Infection, most commonly with Streptococcus pneumoniae and
Hemophilus
influenzae, caused 11 deaths. Two children died of splenic sequestration, 1 of cerebrovascular accident, and 6 of unclear causes. Two patients underwent cholecystectomies, and 17 underwent splenectomies after one or more splenic sequestration crises. The experience of this cohort should reflect closely the true clinical course of those children with Hb SS and Hb SC disease who are observed in sickle cell centers in the United States.
...
PMID:Clinical events in the first decade in a cohort of infants with sickle cell disease. Cooperative Study of Sickle Cell Disease. 749
Sickle cell disease is associated with frequent and often severe infections as a result of immune function impairment and functional asplenia. Also, infection can trigger a vasoocclusive crisis. Pneumococcal bacteremia and meningitis are so severe as to warrant prophylactic penicillin therapy, which has provided a dramatic decrease in early mortality. Bacterial pneumonia is common in patients younger than four years, with most cases being due to S. pneumoniae,
Haemophilus
influenzae, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and Chlamydia pneumoniae.
Acute chest syndrome
is both a difficult differential diagnosis and a common concomitant of bacterial pneumonia. Osteomyelitis is generally due to a salmonella, most often S. enteritidis; multiple foci are common and treatment is difficult, with some patients developing chronic osteomyelitis with sequestration. Parvovirus B 19 infection causes acute bone marrow failure. Malaria does not result in cerebral malaria but can lead to severe anemia or vasoocclusive crisis, and should therefore be effectively prevented. Antimicrobials are generally selected for efficacy against pneumococci (septicemia, meningitis), Salmonella (septicemia, meningitis, osteomyelitis), and mycoplasmas (pneumonia). Prophylactic therapy is of paramount importance and relies on long-term or lifelong penicillin therapy started at four months of age and on closely-spaced immunizations, most notably against pneumococci, the hepatitis B virus, S. typhi, and H. influenzae. Resistant pneumococcal strains have not been reported to cause prophylactic treatment failures. Conjugated pneumococcal vaccines are effective in protecting infants and should therefore be used in sickle cell patients.
...
PMID:[Infection and sickle cell anemia]. 1008 75
Over the past 25 years, morbidity and mortality have decreased significantly in children with sickle cell disease, and screening tests are now available to diagnose the disease in newborns. The incidence of sepsis caused by pneumococcal and
Haemophilus
influenzae infections has declined because of the prophylactic administration of penicillin soon after birth and the timely administration of pneumococcal and H. influenzae type b vaccines. Optimal nutrition can maximize growth in children with sickle cell disease, and timely screening can identify complications such as retinal damage and chronic renal involvement, thereby ensuring prompt treatment. Family physicians and parents who have been educated about sickle cell disease can detect acute, life-threatening complications such as splenic sequestration crisis and
acute chest syndrome
at their onset, thereby allowing treatment to be instituted without delay.
...
PMID:Sickle cell disease in childhood: Part I. Laboratory diagnosis, pathophysiology and health maintenance. 1099 28
We report various pulmonary complications occurring in 88 patients with sickle cell disease: 44 Hb SS, 29 Hb Sb and 15 Hb SC. Pulmonary infections were observed in 20% of patients, and initiated the disease in 7% of cases. They were common in children younger than 10 years especially in Hb SS and Hb Sb patients. Bacteria were identified in 50% of cases predominantly S. pneumoniae, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and
Haemophilus
influenzae.
Acute chest syndrome
occurred in adolescents and adults and was the consequence of pulmonary infarct or embolism which should be differentiated from bacterial pneumonia. Restrive syndrome was present in 2/3 of patients. It was associated to hypoxemia in 80% of cases. Prophylactic therapy was of paramount importance on long-term penicillin therapy and on closely-spaced immunization against pneumococci and
Haemophilus
influenzae. Blood exchange are indicated in severe hypoxemia.
...
PMID:[Pulmonary complications in sickle cell syndromes]. 1102 21