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Query: UMLS:C0348321 (
Haemophilus
)
15,372
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Longterm therapy of chronic bacterial bronchitis assumes two forms: (a) therapy of acute exacerbations, and (b) continuous longterm prophylaxis, chiefly during the 4-7 winter months. Longterm prophylaxis should be confined exclusively to patients with two or more severe annual exacerbations. The commonest pathogens,
Haemophilus
influenzae and pneumococci, are usually sensitive to
ampicillin
and amoxycillin, cotrimoxazole (Bactrim or Eusaprim) and tetracyclines.
...
PMID:[Proceedings: Long-term therapy with antibiotics in chronic bronchitis]. 0 71
Concentrations of bacteria in cerebrospinal fluid ranged from 4.5 X 10(3) to 3 X 10(8) colony-forming units/ml in 27 patients with bacterial meningitis before antibiotic therapy and from 4 X 10(1) to 1.4 X 10(6) CFU/ml in four patients after one to two days of antibiotic therapy. All patients with persistent positive cultures had pretreatment concentrations of 10(7) CFU/ml or greater. A significant association was observed between cerebrospinal fluid lactic acid dehydrogenase activity and concentrations of bacteria (p less than 0.01). Large inocula of
Hemophilus
influenzae type b (10(7)) increased the minimal inhibitory concentration for penicillin and
ampicillin
but not for chloramphenicol. The minimal inhibitory concentration of each of the three antibiotics increased when group B streptococci were assayed. These data indicate that persistence of a positive culture may be related to large initial concentrations of bacteria. The relative "resistance" in vitro of large inocula possibly contributes to this persistence. These observations are also consistent with the hypothesis that lactic acid dehydrogenase activity in cerebrospinal fluid is derived from bacteria.
...
PMID:Concentrations of bacteria in cerebrospinal fluid of patients with bacterial meningitis. 0 35
Strains of Diplococcus pneumoniae and
Haemophilus
influenzae were tested for susceptibility to numerous antibiotics by a twofold agar dilution method using an inocula replicator. Undiluted, fully grown broth cultures were used as inocula for both species, and cultures of pneumococci diluted 1:1,000 were also tested. The antibiotics included most of those in common use in the United States as well as some chemical modifications recently approved and others that are under investigation. The most striking aspect of the results was the marked susceptibility of the pneumococci to all the antibiotics tested except the polymyxins and most of the aminoglycoside antibiotics, although some new aminoglycosides were active in quite low concentrations. Some of the strains of pneumococci were of decreased susceptibility to penicillin G (minimal inhibitory concentrations, 0.2 to 0.4 mug/ml), but none were tetracycline resistant, although such strains had been reported previously from this laboratory. The strains of H. influenzae, which were all serologically nontypable, exhibited different patterns of susceptibility to the groups of antibiotics and to the individual chemically related ones. None of these strains (isolated early in 1972) were
ampicillin
resistant. The most active agents against H. influenzae were: carbenicillin and
ampicillin
, analogues related to each of them, rifampin, chloramphenicol, and the polymyxins. However, the tetracycline analogues other than tetracycline, some aminoglycosides, notably tobramycin, kanamycin, gentamicin, and verdamicin, erythromycin, and some new lincomycin analogues were also active in low concentrations. Trimethoprim alone was highly active, and in combination with sulfamethoxazole it was even more active and synergistic against strains of both D. pneumoniae and H. influenzae.
...
PMID:Susceptibility of pneumococci and Haemophilus influenzae to antibacterial agents. 0 52
One hundred and forty-seven patients with acute suppurative otitis media, were divided into three groups and treated with antibiotics (azidocillin,
ampicillin
, and cephalexin). The therapeutic effect was assessed bacterioloically by swabbing from the aural discharge and from the nasopharynx on the first, second, third, and seventh day after initiation of treatment. In addition, the concentration of antibiotic in the aural discharge and in the nasopharynx was determined. As compared with other published materials, there was a common occurrence of
Haemophilus
influenzae and S. Aureus. Hemolytic streptococci are less common than prior to the advent of antibiotics. Pneumococci disappeared in all cases from the aural discharge in the course of the first three days. The effect upon
Haemophilus
was slower. In the nasopharynx the effect was questionable, and no effect was obtained upon other bacteria. The clinical course could not be correlated to the bacterial findings except that resistant bacteria were found in all cases with persisting discharge.
...
PMID:Bacteriology and antibiotics in acute suppurative otitis media. 0 19
Middle ear exudate was obtained by myringotomy or aspiration from 625 suburban children, aged 1 month to 12 years, who had acute otitis media; bacterial pathogens were isolated from 71%.
Haemophilus
species were isolated from 212 (29%), and Streptococcus pneumoniae from 205 (28%). From 1975 to August 1977, the number of
Haemophilus
isolates found to be resistant to
ampicillin
has appreciably increased. Currently, 8% of all cases of acute otitis media in the Washington, DC, area are due to H influenzae resistant to
ampicillin
. Thirty-one of 35 patients with resistant H influenzae otitis were treated with an erythromycin/sulfisoxazole combination with an impressive clinical response. Twenty-six of these 31 cases had failed to have H influenzae eradicated by an average of ten days of oral
ampicillin
in recommended doses.
...
PMID:The increasing incidence of Ampicillin-resistant Haemophilus influenzae. A cause of otitis media. 2 67
Twenty laboratories in England and Scotland took part in 1977 in a survey of antibiotic resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniae and
Haemophilus
influenzae. In Str pneumoniae 59 (6.8%) of the 866 strains studied were resistant to tetracycline and three to chloramphenicol, and one strain showed a decreased susceptibility to penicillin. The prevalence of resistance to tetracycline was lower than that found in a similar study performed in 1975. Nine hundred and fifty-two strains of H influenzae were examined: 15 (1.6%) were resistant to
ampicillin
(all were beta-lactamase producers) and 26 (2.7%) to tetracycline. Only two strains were resistant to chloramphenicol and two to trimethoprim. Sixty-three H influenzae strains were capsulated. Thirty-four of these were of Pittman type b, and antibiotic resistance, particularly to
ampicillin
, was more common in these than in other serotypes or non-typable strains. Some variation was seen in the resistance rate of both H influenzae and Str pneumoniae to tetracycline in strains from different centres, but too few were isolated to assess whether this represented a true geographical difference.
...
PMID:Antibiotic resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniae and Haemophilus influenzae. Report of a study group on bacterial resistance. 2 50
The emergence of
ampicillin
-resistant
Haemophilus
as a clinical problem in otitis media necessitates a search for alternative, effective therapy. An orally absorbable cephalosporin derivative, cefaclor, is equally effective in vitro against
ampicillin
-susceptible and -resistant
Haemophilus
and against other bacteria that cause acute otitis media. Two dosage schedules of cefaclor (40 and 60 mg/kg/day) were evaluated in 95 infants with acute otitis media. Bacterial origin was determined by a culture of tympanocentesis fluid. Success rates using the smaller dosage were inferior to those using the larger dosage. Results of therapy for pneumococcal and Haemophilus infection with 60 mg/kg/day were comparable to those previously found with amoxicillin trihydrate or with combinations of trisulfapyrimadines with erythromycin or penicillin V. One patient with an
ampicillin
-resistant Haemophilus infection responded well to cefaclor and did not have a relapse. Cefaclor was well tolerated and caused an acceptably low incidence of minor, adverse effects. Cefaclor deserves further testing as a candidate for preferred status as a single-drug treatment of acute otitis media.
...
PMID:Treatment of acute otitis media of infancy with cefaclor. 3 Oct 84
HR 756, the syn derivative of 7-[(2-(2-amino-4-thiazolyl)-2-methoxyimino)acetamido]cephalosporanic acid, is a new semisynthetic cephalosporin. It was 80 times more active than the anti derivative against beta-lactamase-producing strains of gram-negative bacteria. The range of inhibitory concentrations of HR 756 against gram-negative bacteria, including
Haemophilus
influenzae, susceptible or resistant to penicillins and cephalosporins was from 0.01 to 0.1 mug/ml. This activity was consistently higher than those observed with cephalothin, cephaloridine, cephalexin, and cefazolin. Nevertheless, some strains of Enterobacter cloacae were resistant. HR 756 showed very similar activity to that of
ampicillin
against group A streptococci and Streptococcus pneumoniae.
...
PMID:HR 756, the syn isomer of a new methoxyimino cephalosporin with unusual antibacterial activity. 3 36
Three groups of patients (total 48) with acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis were treated orally for 10 days, in a double-blind clinical trial, with bacampicillin (an
ampicillin
ester) 1600 mg twice daily, 800 mg three times daily and oral
ampicillin
1000 mg three times daily. Most exacerbations were caused by
Haemophilus
influenzae or Streptococcus pneumoniae. Clinical and bacteriological results were significantly more favourable in the two bacampicillin-treated groups. Both drugs were generally well tolerated. Serum and sputum
ampicillin
assays after the first dose showed higher and earlier peak levels after bacampicillin. Only after bacampicillin did the sputum levels regularly exceed the
ampicillin
M.I.C. for the
Haemophilus
influenzae strains. After the 1600 mg and 800 mg dose these levels averaged 0.85 and 0.41 mg/l respectively. One third of the
Haemophilus
influenzae strains studied required more than 0.25 mg/l
ampicillin
for inhibition of growth. Bacampicillin 1600 mg twice daily appears to be an effective and safe treatment for most episodes of acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis.
...
PMID:Twice daily dosage of bacampicillin in chronic bronchitis. A double-blind study. 3 15
Simultaneous cultures of the nasopharynx and middle ear exudate (obtained by tympanocentesis) were obtained from 225 children (mean age, 34 months; median age, 41 months) with suppurative otitis media. A 72% prediction rate for middle ear pathogens was obtained by examining the nasopharyngeal cultures after the strict observance of two essential prerequisites: (1) the nasopharyngeal culture was immediately plated on appropriate solid agar and (2) a semiquantitative method for bacterial enumeration was employed in the reading of the nasopharyngeal culture plates. The technique was most valuable where 2+ (greater than 25% up to 50% of total number of colonies was a single pathogen) or greater of a single pathogen was recovered from the nasopharynx. In only one instance, the semiquantitative nasopharyngeal culture incorrectly predicted the middle ear pathogen if one was recovered. Quantitative nasopharyngeal cultures were particularly useful in predicting the presence of
ampicillin
-resistant
Haemophilus
influenzae and group A streptococci as causative agents in otitis media.
...
PMID:The nasopharyngeal culture in acute otitis media. A reappraisal of its usefulness. 3 39
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