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)

The emergence of ampicillin-resistant strains of Haemophilus influenzae has emphasized the need for an improved practical method for routine susceptibility testing of clinical isolates. We have previously described a simplified medium for quantitative dilution susceptibility testing that is composed of Mueller-Hinton medium plus Supplement C (Difco). In the present study, paired broth-dilution and disk-diffusion susceptibility tests with ampicillin and chloramphenicol were performed on 100 strains of Haemophilus (95 H. influenzae and five H. parainfluenzae), including 30 strains with previously documented ampicillin resistance. Disk-diffusion tests were performed in exactly the same manner as the standardized Kirby-Bauer procedure used for less fastidious organisms, except that supplemented Mueller-Hinton agar plates were incubated in an increased-CO2 atmosphere. Using this method, ampicillin-susceptible strains of Haemophilus produced zone diameters of 22 mm or more, while ampicillin-resistant strains produced zones of 18 mm or less. All strains were chloramphenicol-susceptible and produced zone diameters of 30 mm or more. This method would allow routine disk-diffusion testing of isolates of H. influenzae by hospital diagnostic laboratories, using a clear medium that closely resembles unsupplemented Mueller-Hinton agar.
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PMID:Standardized disk-diffusion susceptibility test for Haemophilus influenzae. 30 Feb 21

Case report of a neonatal meningitis due to Haemophilus influenzae. The treatment with ampicillin was ineffective because of insensitivity. This case demonstrates the importance of a proper bacteriological identification in order to avoid ineffective or delayed treatment.
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PMID:Neonatal haemophilus aphrophilus meningitis. 30 Jul 34

Inhibitory levels of ampicillin induced filamentation of growing Haemophilus influenzae ATCC 19418 within 30 min. Filaments became swollen and interrupted by regular periodic saccular outpouchings along the major axis. The degree of filamentation was dependent upon ampicillin concentration and time.
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PMID:Ampicillin-induced morphological alterations of Haemophilus influenzae type b. 30 Oct 6

On the basis of their susceptibility to ampicillin, strains of Haemophilus influenzae can be divided into three types: type 1 are normally susceptible strains, type 2 produce stable spheroplasts from low inocula, and type 3 are beta-lactamase producers. Because of the production of spheroplasts, standard broth and agar dilution techniques have failed to differentiate between the responses of type 2 and 3 strains to ampicillin, or to identify the superiority of cefuroxime over ampicillin against the beta-lactamase-producing strains. Disk susceptibility tests with heavily seeded plates were also difficult to interpret. To overcome these problems, we developed a medium that supports the growth of H. influenzae, but not survival of spheroplasts, thereby reducing the complicating influence of spheroplast formation. Utilization of the medium made it possible to identify beta-lactamase-producing strains via both minimal inhibitory concentration and disk susceptibility techniques, as well as the superiority of cefuroxime over ampicillin against such strains. In vivo experiments showed that cefuroxime and ampicillin are equally active against infections with type 1 and 2 strains, but that cefuroxime is superior to ampicillin against infections with type 3 beta-lactamase-producing strains.
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PMID:Comparative acitivity of ampicillin and cefuroxime against three types of Haemophilus influenzae. 30 Oct 7

Tetracycline resistance in a strain of Haemophilus influenzae isolated in the United Kingdom was found to be determined by an apparently non-selftransmissible plasmid of 31 X 10(6) daltons (31 MDal), designated pUB701. Deoxyribonucleic acid hybridization studies indicated that pUB701 shares about 70% base sequence homology with the 30-MDal ampicillin resistance R plasmid RSF007 isolated in the United States from H. influenzae, and 64% sequence homology with the 38-MDal tetracycline and chloramphenicol resistance R plasmid pRI234, isolated in the Netherlands. Heteroduplex studies between RSF007 and pUB701 confirmed the fact that these plasmids were largely homologous, except that pUB701 contained the tetracycline resistance transposon TnD, whereas RSF007 contained the ampicillin resistance transposon TnA. A strain of H. parainfluenzae resistant to both chloramphenicol and tetracycline carried two species of plasmid deoxyribonucleic acid of 2.7 and 0.75 MDal. We were unable to prove that either resistance was plasmid-borne in this strain. Hybridization studies with a [3H]thymine-labeled tetracycline resistance enteric plasmid suggested that the tetracycline transposon was integrated into the chromosome of H. parainfluenzae UB2832. We conclude either that the strains we studied received R factors of the same incompatibility group bearing different resistance genes, or that different resistance genes were translocated to a commom resident plasmid of H. influenzae.
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PMID:Relationships among some R plasmids found in Haemophilus influenzae. 30 23

We examined ampicillin-resistant strains of Haemophilus influenzae to compare the percentage of resistant organisms in each strain with the susceptibility to ampicillin by an agar dilution method. Using an inoculum of 10(4) colony-forming units, the minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) increased with the percentage of resistant organisms in the strain. Laboratory-manipulated strains composed of different proportions of a susceptible and a resistant strain behaved similarly. The survival of isolated colony-forming units (colony MIC) was then determined by spreading inocula over the surface of a set of MIC plates, resulting in separation of individual colonies. This modification of the susceptibility test to the colony level gave end points that were clear and reproducible and that did not vary with changes in incubation time or temperature. True differences in susceptibility among strains were demonstrated by this method, whereas results of the conventional MIC test may reflect only the number of resistant organisms present in the inoculum.
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PMID:Manner and meaning of susceptibility testing of ampicillin-resistant Haemophilus influenzae. 30 28

The capillary beta-lactamase test for the detection of Haemophilus influenzae resistance to ampicillin was evaluated against 132 strains of H. influenzae recently isolated from clinical materials and four reference strains. Nineteen strains, including two of serotype b, were beta-lactamase-positive. The minimal inhibitory concentrations (MIC) of ampicillin for the 117 beta-lactamase-negative strains ranged from less than or equal to 0.125 to 2 microgram/ml (only one strain had a MIC of 2 microgram/ml). The range of MIC's of ampicillin was 4 to 64 microgram/ml for the 19 beta-lactamase-positive strains; all but two strains required 8 microgram/ml or more for inhibition. The capillary beta-lactamase test is an easy, rapid and reliable test for the detection of H. influenzae resistance to ampicillin. It is suitable for routine use in the clinical microbiology laboratory. The MIC of carbenicillin was higher for ampicillin-resistant than for ampicillin-susceptible strains, but the highest MIC (32 microgram/ml) was within achievable serum concentrations. Both cefamandole and chloramphenicol were active against all strains.
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PMID:Evaluation of the capillary beta-lactamase test and antimicrobial susceptibility of Haemophilus influenzae. 30 42

In order to obtain Haemophilus influenzae, other than Type b, with highly probable human pathogeniticy strains were collected that had been isolated in abundant numbers from middle ear or maxillary sinus secretions of 157 patients with otitis media or sinusitis. The distribution of serotypes was as follows: nontypable 33.8%, Type b 26.1% Type a 19.1%, Type c 7.6%, Type e 5.7%, Type f 5.1%, and Type d 2.5%. The type distribution did not depend on the source of the strains. All strains were susceptible to ampicillin and amoxycillin in vitro; the broth dilution minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) of both antibiotics varied only fourfold; typical MIC values were 0.125 microgram/ml and 0.25 microngram/ml, respectively. Susceptibility did not vary with the source or type of the strains nor with the presence or absence of concomitant penicillin therapy.
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PMID:Haemophilus influenzae in otitis media and sinusitis: serotypes and susceptibilty to ampicillin and amoxycillin in vitro. 30 34

Intraperitoneal injections of 250 mg of ampicillin per kg every 6 h for 30 h sterilized the blood and cerebrospinal fluid of infant rats infected with either a beta-lactamase-containing strain of Haemophilus influenzae type b or a strain lacking the enzyme. However, a single injection of 100 mg/kg sterilized the blood and cerebrospinal fluid of significantly fewer of those rats infected with the beta-lactamase-producing strain. The results suggest that resistance of beta-lactamase-containing strains of H. influenzae in vivo may be inoculum dependent, as demonstrated previously in vitro. The infant rat model appears suited for the quantitative delineation of the effect of beta-lactamase on the treatment of H. influenzae bacteremia and meningitis with beta-lactamase antibiotics.
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PMID:Beta-lactamase effect on ampicillin treatment of Haemophilus influenzae B bacteremia and meningitis in infant rats. 30 97

A survey of 158 children with acute haematogenous osteomyelitis, and of 94 children with acute septic arthritis over an 8-year period was made to determine which bacteria cause these infections. In the osteomyelitis group the organism most frequently detected was Staphylococcus aureus (74% of cases). In 16% of cases streptococci were found. Staph. aureus was also the most frequently grown organism in cases of acute septic arthritis (55% of cases), but Haemophilus influenzae accounted for 24% of positive cultures. On the basis of the survey it is the current practice of the author to use a combination of methicillin or cloxacillin and penicillin for acute haematogenous osteomyelitis, and methicilline or cloxacillin and ampicillin for acute septic arthritis. The choice of antibiotics is vitally important as treatment must start before the results of culture are known. Repeated evaluation of trends in the pattern of causative organisms is strongly recommended, in order to be aware of changing sensitivity of organisms to antibiotics.
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PMID:Choice of antibiotics in management of acute osteomyelitis and acute septic arthritis in children. 30


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