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)

Chloramphenicol and thiamphenicol were tested by the agar dilution method against 105 Salmonella typhi, 15 S. paratyphi A, 6 S. paratyphi B, 8 S. paratyphi c, 57 Haemophilus influenzae and 60 Neisseria gonorrhoeae strains. The two drugs showed similar in vitro activity against strains of H. influenzae and N. gonorrhoeae irrespective of their beta-lactamase production. In contrast, while all the tested isolatels of typhoid and paratyphoid fever Salmonella were susceptible to chloramphenicol, most of these strains showed resistance to thiamphenicol with MICs greater than or equal to 8 microgram/ml. The significance of these findings are discussed.
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PMID:Comparative in vitro activity of chloramphenicol and thiamphenicol against Haemophilus influenzae, Neisseria gonorrhoeae and the typhoid and paratyphoid bacilli. 680 86

Data were collected on anti-microbial usage and health problems, in beef feedlot calves. Although the association between them was not significant, many feedlot owners did not use recommended dosages or duration of treatment and this may have led to a reduced recovery rate.Injectable tetracyclines were the most frequent antimicrobial for primary treatment of sick calves; whereas chloramphenicol was selected most frequently when the primary treatment appeared to be ineffective. Treatment with anti-microbials reduced the likelihood of isolating both Pasteurella multocida and Haemophilus somnus. Chloramphenicol therapy reduced the likelihood of isolating Pasteurella haemolytica. Therapy with a particular antimicrobial, in the week prior to death, increased the level of resistance in P. haemolytica to that antimicrobial. Treatment with other antimicrobials also increased the level of resistance to that antimicrobial; although to a lesser degree. The lowest levels of resistance were observed in Pasteurella isolated from nontreated cattle. After adjustment for antimicrobial exposure, resistance to penicillin, tetracyclines and chloramphenicol occurred together more frequently than expected by chance alone.
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PMID:Antimicrobial use in feedlot calves: its association with culture rates and antimicrobial susceptibility. 683 6

The clinical and laboratory date on 115 pediatric patients with bacterial meningitis are presented. Sixty-one were less than 12 mo of age including 13 less than 1 mo of age. Thirty-nine children were treated prior to admission with antimicrobial agents which obscured accurate bacteriologic diagnosis in eight of them. Gram-negative enteric bacteria, mainly Escherichia coli, were recorded in 9 of 13 neonates. Hemophilus influenzae type B accounted for 56 (52%) of all isolated recorded in those greater than 2 mo of age, of which 35% were resistant to chloramphenicol. Seventy-eight patients (73%) recovered completely following 10 to 14 days of antimicrobial therapy. Fifteen patients died, most of whom were less than 1 yr of age, including five neonates. Major neurologic sequelae included subdural effusions, cerebral abscesses and recurrent convulsions. This study, which documents the infrequency of Streptococcus group B and H. influenzae as etiological agents of neonatal meningitis, indicates that treatment of this disease with ampicillin and an aminoglycoside is efficacious. Chloramphenicol may be the drug of choice in the postnatal period, since H. influenzae is partly resistant to ampicillin.
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PMID:Bacterial meningitis. A follow-up study of 115 children. 692 Nov 77

The increasing incidence of Haemophilus influenzae resistant to ampicillin has clinical implications not only for pediatricians but also for family physicians, because the bacterium is recognized more frequently as the etiologic agent for diseases in adults as well as in young children. Ampicillin is no longer the automatic choice for treatment of patients thought to have life-threatening H influenzae disease, and empiric treatment of otitis media must be reexamined. Chloramphenicol, as well as ampicillin, must be considered for the treatment of meningitis and other serious systemic H influenzae infections. Once the infective organism has been isolated and tested for resistance, ampicillin alone may be used if indicated or desired. Alternatives to ampicillin for middle ear infection are trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim, Septra), erythromycin-sulfonamide (Pediazole), and cefaclor (Ceclor). Isolation and susceptibility tests are seldom done because they necessitate tympanocentesis.
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PMID:Ampicillin-resistant Haemophilus influenzae. 2. Therapeutic considerations. 697 67

The effects of combinations of ampicillin and chloramphenicol against seven strains of Haemophilus influenzae type b (five beta-lactamase-negative and two beta-lactamase-positive strains) were evaluated by killing-kinetic methods. Growth of strains was assessed in modified Levinthal broth against an inoculum of 10(5) organisms per ml; colony counts were performed immediately and at 6 and 20 h postinoculation. Ampicillin and chloramphenicol were completely bactericidal at 20 h. reducing bacterial densities to 0 colony-forming units per ml at concentrations equivalent to the ampicillin inhibitory concentration and twofold the chloramphenicol inhibitory concentrations. Chloramphenicol at its inhibitory concentration or at one-half of its inhibitory concentration prevented the normally bactericidal activity of ampicillin at 20 h incubation, but not at 6 h.
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PMID:Chloramphenicol inhibition of the bactericidal effect of ampicillin against Haemophilus influenzae. 697 74

Chloramphenicol is an old antibiotic being used with increasing frequency in serious childhood infections largely due to the emergence of ampicillin-resistant Hemophilus influenzae type b. Because of this renewed popularity and the recent availability of accurate analytical techniques for measurement of chloramphenicol, there have been many recent articles examining the pharmacokinetics of chloramphenicol and its two major prodrug esters, chloramphenicol succinate and chloramphenicol palmitate. New data from these studies include the incomplete bioavailability of chloramphenicol succinate, the possible superior bioavailability of chloramphenicol palmitate vs. chloramphenicol succinate, and the wide interpatient variability in chloramphenicol clearance. These observations, coupled with the known serious hematologic toxicity (reversible bone marrow suppression or irreversible aplastic anemia) and metabolic toxicity (gray baby syndrome) associated with chloramphenicol use, require that initial antibiotic doses be selected by age and be carefully individualized by measurement of peak serum chloramphenicol concentrations.
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PMID:Chloramphenicol: new perspectives on an old drug. 704 26

Chloramphenicol is bacteristatic for most species but bactericidal for Haemophilus influenzae and Neisseria meningitidis. Despite its generally lower activity, thiamphenicol exhibited equal or greater activity against these two species than did chloramphenicol. It is suggested that a particular place might be defined for thiamphenicol in the treatment of infection due to these two organisms.
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PMID:Thiamphenicol and chloramphenicol: an in vitro comparison with particular reference to bactericidal activity. 736 5

In 1992, an ongoing, international multicenter study was established to investigate the antimicrobial susceptibility of community-acquired lower respiratory tract bacterial pathogens: the Alexander Project. Isolates cultured from patients living in geographically separated areas, ten in the European Union (EU) and five in the United States (US), were collected and tested using standard methods in a central laboratory. A total of 4,155 isolates of Haemophilus influenzae was collected during the period 1992-1994. beta-lactamase production was the principal mechanism of resistance observed with overall rates in the US (1992 = 26.3%; 1993 = 28.2%; and 1994 = 30.1%) generally twice those seen in the EU (1992 = 12.3%; 1993 = 14.4%; and 1994 = 15.5%). Chloramphenicol resistance was generally low except in Spanish centers where rates ranging from 4.0 to 15.9% were observed during the study period. One thousand one hundred ninety-three isolates of Moraxella catarrhalis were tested. beta-lactamase production was the only mechanism of resistance of any importance detected, with the vast majority of isolates producing the enzyme. Two thousand eight hundred twenty-nine isolates of Streptococcus pneumoniae were tested. French and Spanish centers provided isolates with the highest rates of either low-level (intermediate) or high-level penicillin resistance, which in 1994 ranged from 10.2 to 31.4% and 30.4 to 40.1% for each resistance category, respectively. With the exception of the fluoroquinolones, rates of resistance to other antimicrobials including the macrolides, doxycycline, chloramphenicol, and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole were high, generally, in centers with a high prevalence of penicillin resistance. However, in some centers (Toulouse, France and Genoa, Italy) this association was not complete for the macrolides.
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PMID:Results of the Alexander Project: a continuing, multicenter study of the antimicrobial susceptibility of community-acquired lower respiratory tract bacterial pathogens. 893 41

The authors valued the incidence and clinical therapeutic aspects of Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) meningitis in children. They report a retrospective study, in children, with diagnosis of acute purulent meningitis, from January 1982 to December 1994, aged between 1 month and 14 years. Particular attention was direct to Haemophilus influenzae type b meningitis (20 cases). The incidence rate of Hib meningitis in the overall cases (89) was 22.47% (20), while among children younger than 5 years Hib was the most frequently pathogen isolated (20/58-34.47%). In 1/4 of cases, particularly in children younger than 1 years, exordium was aspecific and unclear. At admission culture and examination of Cerebrospinal Fluid (CFS) have been done. CFS was cultured on blood agar and chocolate plates. A latex agglutination test was used for rapid detection of the bacterial antigens. In some cases we looked for bacterial antigens in urine. 20% of children had complications and 10% had sequelae (1 years of follow-up). We didn't have any dead. Antibiotic treatment was principally with Ampicillin, Cephalosporin and Chloramphenicol. The results of this study confirm the Hib gravity and suggest that the administration of conjugate vaccine against Hib to all living in Italy is justified.
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PMID:Hemophilus influenzae type b meningitis: pediatric overview. 917 16

The present study was undertaken to determine the in vitro drug resistance of Haemophilus influenzae (68 isolates) and H. parainfluenzae (17 isolates). The tests susceptibility to Ampicillin, Amoxicilin/Clavulanic Acid, Cefaclor, Cefuroxime, Cotrimoxazole, Aztreonam, Ceftriaxone, Tetracycline, Ciprofloxacin, Rifampicin and Chloramphenicol were performed with a standard disk-diffusion method. The NCCLS methodology and susceptibility interpretative criteria were applied as described by the disk manufacturer. Beta-lactamase production was detected with nitrocefin impregnated disk (Cefinase, BBL Microbiology System). Resistance in nosocomially acquired Haemophilus isolates to several antibiotics was observed. Of the Haemophilus isolates 28.2% were Ampicillin in resistant, all were susceptible to the combination of Amoxicillin/Clavulanic acid. The Ampicillin-resistant strains were beta-lactamase producers. We observed the high resistance (70.1%) to Tetracycline and (28.2%) to SXT (Cotrimoxazole). All isolates of Haemophilus were susceptible to Ciprofloxacin. The low resistance percentages to Rifampin (1.2%), Aztreonam (3.5%) and Chloramphenicol (3.5%) was observed.
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PMID:[Resistance of Haemophilus sp. to antibiotics]. 959 39


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