Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0348321 (Haemophilus)
15,372 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Guidelines for the use of antibiotics in infants and children must take into account drug absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion. In the developing human being, these factors may differ significantly from those in the adult, and so there are differences in therapeutic efficacy and toxicity. Certain drugs should be avoided in the neonate because of known toxicity; these include the sulfonamides, tetracycline, and high doses of chloramphenicol. Antibiotic therapy should be modified in neonates in several ways because of the biologic immaturity of systems important for the termination of drug action, such as the liver and kidney. Because of poor conjugation, inactivation, or excretion, the administration of many antibiotics results in higher and more prolonged serum levels than those produced in older infants. Thus, in the neonate, the dosages of many antibiotics have to be lower and intervals between administration longer. In the case of gentamicin, studies in the 6-month to adult age group have shown that children less than 5 years old require almost twice as much of the drug as do children older than 10 years or adults to achieve similar peak concentrations. The appearance throughout the United States of strains of Haemophilus influenzae, type b, that are resistant to ampicillin has necessitated a change in the initial antibiotic therapy given to children with bacterial meningitis. There are few uses for tetracycline in pediatric practice.
...
PMID:Antibiotic therapy for severe infections in infants and children. 30 30

We evaluated the inhibitory effect of trimethoprim (TMP) and sulfamethoxazole (SMZ), alone and in combination, against 34 strains of Haemophilus influenzae. Growth inhibition was determined after incubation for 18 h by comparing viable counts of cultures in drug-containing medium with corresponding counts of control cultures in drug-free medium. In a modified, thymidine-deficient Levinthal broth, the numbers of colony-forming units of all the isolates tested were reduced 100-fold or more by TMP/SMZ (1.25/25 mug/ml) as compared with growth without drug. Inhibition was significantly greater with TMP/SMZ than with either TMP or SMZ alone. Ampicillin-susceptible and ampicillin-resistant strains were equally susceptible to TMP/SMZ. Growth of nontypable strains was inhibited more than growth of type b organisms.
...
PMID:Quantitative inhibition of Haemophilus influenzae by trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole. 30 86

A method is described for the rapid, simultaneous determination of the MIC's of chloramphenicol and ampicillin to Haemophilus influenzae. Excellent agreement was observed between the Autobac method and the agar dilution method for antimicrobial susceptibility. All ampicillin resistant Haemophilus isolates produced beta lactamase and none of the suceptible strains produced this enzyme.
...
PMID:Comparison of rapid methods of antimicrobial susceptibility in Haemophilus influenzae. 30 95

Ampicillin-resistant Hemophilus influenzae had not been identified in Fresno, California, before June 1976. In the 12 months that followed, eight resistant type B strains and three resistant nontypable isolates were cultured from patients treated at two hospitals that provide nearly all of the acute pediatric inpatient care for the area. Two of the resistant strains were obtained from patients with invasive infections and represented 4.2 percent of Hemophilus influenzae isolated from blood, cerebrospinal fluid or joint aspirates during the 12 months. The remaining six resistant type B strains were obtained from 117 patients, and were the predominant organism in cultures of other sites, primarily respiratory secretions. In two of three patients infected with nontypable organisms, resistance appeared to emerge during therapy with ampicillin. Measurement of beta lactamase was a practical and accurate method for differentiating between ampicillin-sensitive and resistant strains. All ten of the beta lactamase-positive isolates tested had minimal inhibitory concentrations (MIC) for ampicillin of 15 mug per ml, or less. In contrast 30 beta lactamase-negative strains had MIC's of 1.5 mug per ml, or less, of ampicillin. Our results indicate that ampicillin resistance has become a significant problem in the Central Valley of California and probably the entire state.
...
PMID:Ampicillin-resistant Hemophilus influenzae. 30 57

Two adults were admitted to the University Hospital of Geneva with acute Haemophilus influenzae type b epiglottitis. The disease was characterized by rapid progression of sore throat, upper dysphagia, fever and dyspnea. Acute upper airway obstruction required emergency tracheotomy in both cases. The patients recovered under ampicillin therapy. All the 100 cases from the literature for which clinical data were available have been analyzed:--Epiglottitis in adult is not exceptional.--Haemophilus influenzae type b is the most common infective organism documented, and was found in all positive blood cultures but one.--The typical presentation is severe sore throat, with upper dysphagia, fever and dyspnea.--Clinical course is rapid and serious, and acute respiratory distress develops in 57% of cases; overall mortality is 27%.--Emergency routine tracheotomy appears to be the most reliable treatment.
...
PMID:[Acute epiglottitides in the adult]. 30 60

Ampicillin-resistant Haemophilus influenzae does occur now in the FRG. In one isolate a plasmid with resistance genes (R-factor) could be demonstrated as cause of the ampicillin resistance. This R-factor influences production of a beta-lactamase of the TEM type which destroys ampicillin. The infectious nature of the ampicillin resistance was proven by the fact that it was transferable to other bacterial species through cocultivation. Parallel to ampicillin resistance tetracycline resistant Haemophilus influenzae has occurred in the FRG. Here the resistance was equally bound to plasmids. These R-factors are infectious as well. Molecular analysis of the 3 isolated resistance factors in Haemophilus influenzae showed that they carry the same resistance genes which are known from R-factors of Enterobacteriaceae. In the therapy of purulent infections due to Haemophilus influenzae such as childhood meningitis one can no longer rely on general ampicillin sensitivity of the offender. Apart from ampicillin and tetracycline resistant Haemophilus influenzae chloramphenicol resistance has been observed in a few cases.
...
PMID:[Infectious resistance to antibiotics in Haemophilus influenzae (author's transl)]. 30 40

Synergy, determined by isobolograms constructed from the minimal inhibitory concentrations of combinations of ampicillin and chloramphenicol, was observed against six of 13 ampicillin-susceptible Haemophilus influenzae type b isolates and against five of eight ampicillin-resistant strains by using a small inoculum of 10(4) colony forming units (CFU) per milliliter. Synergy occurred against nine of 13 ampicillin-susceptible and against two of eight ampicillin-resistant strains using a large inoculum of 10(7) CFU/ml. When synergy was not observed, additive effects occurred against the remainder of isolates. Additive effects were also observed against single strains of chloramphenicol-resistant, nontypeable H. influenzae and H. parainfluenzae. No antagonism was observed. These data indicate that ampicillin and chloramphenicol may be synergistic against a significant number of H. influenzae strains depending on inoculum size, but the effect is unpredictable for a given isolate. These data support the recommendation that ampicillin and chloramphenicol both be used as initial therapy for patients with suspected bacterial meningitis.
...
PMID:Effect of ampicillin and chloramphenicol against Haemophilus influenzae. 30 90

Haemophilus vaginalis (Corynebacterium vaginale) was isolated from genital specimens from 150 women who came to a public health venereal disease clinic. Forty-six patients returned to the clinic for at least one follow-up examination. Of the returnees, 22 of 24 who initially had received adequate therapy (14 g ampicillin in seven days) were cured, compared with three of 22 who did not received adequate therapy (X2 = 25.11; P less than 0.00005). These data included significant cure rates with adequate therapy among the 46 returnees, of whom 25 had vaginitis due to H. vaginalis only (X2 = 16.67; P less than 0.00005) and 21 had vaginitis caused by a mixture of pathogens (X2 = 5.86; P less than 0.0156). Specimens obtained from 24 of the 46 returnees were cultured for H. vaginalis on the second visit; 19 were negative, and only five were positive. Clinical responses of the patients correlated closely with the results of culture in both treated and untreated groups (X2 = 14.23; P less than 0.00016).
...
PMID:Haemophilus vaginalis (Corynebacterium vaginale) vaginitis in women attending public health clinics: response to treatment with ampicillin. 30 33

Three children had osteomyelitis due to Haemophilus influenzae type b. They were seen with signs and symptoms indistinguishable from infection caused by other organisms. One child was initially misdiagnosed as having septic arthritis because of failure to appreciate that Hemophilus may also cause bone infection. In the second patient osteomyelitis and arthritis developed during ampicillin sodium therapy for treatment of Hemophilus meningitis. His initial infection was caused by an ampicillin-sensitive isolate but his orthopedic infection subsequently responded to therapy only after changing to a regimen of chloramphenicol. In the third patient, bone scintigraphy was helpful in diagnosis since serial roentgenograms were not diagnostic of osteomyelitis. The anticapsular antibody responses of these patients were measured by radioimmune assay. The levels found were low but comparable to age-matched control children with H influenzae type b meningitis.
...
PMID:Haemophilus influenzae type b osteomyelitis. 30 93

The need for an accurate and rapid method of testing ampicillin susceptibility of Haemophilus influenzae, especially strains isolated from patients with meningitis and septicemia, is indisputable. Various methods have been employed for this purpose. Each has advantages and disadvantages. This report describes a modification of the capillary acidometric procedure in which an agar plate is substituted for a tube. All beta-lactamase results obtained by this modified technique correlated with minimal inhibitory concentrations determined in liquid media and the chromogenic cephalosporin substrate method. This modified acidometric agar procedure is a simple, inexpensive, accurate, and rapid way to determine H. influenzae susceptibility to ampicillin.
...
PMID:Acidometric agar plate method for ampicillin susceptibility testing of Haemophilus influenzae. 30 20


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>