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Query: UMLS:C0519030 (
Klebsiella
)
21,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The capacity of enteric bacteria (E. coli, Salmonella, Pseudomonas, Shigella and
Klebsiella
) to catalyze the covalent binding of benzo(a)pyrene (BP), cholic acid, deoxycholic acid and cholesterol was investigated. In general, these bacteria were incapable of activating BP to a covalently bound product with calf thymus DNA. Metabolism studies of BP by fluorometric assay failed to indicate any accumulation of BP-3-hydroxy in the incubation medium. Detailed metabolic investigation with high-pressure liquid chromatography indicated that these bacteria did not produce any known metabolites which are formed by mammalian systems. However, radioactivity was detected in all fractions, suggesting that the bacteria were readily metabolizing BP into smaller molecules for energy and carbon sources. Although the enteric bacteria did not metabolize BP into known metabolites, some were capable of activating cholesterol, cholic acid and deoxycholic acid to covalently bound products with DNA. The binding data with cholesterol and bile acids also suggested that the binding process required NADPH as a cofactor because binding level was rather low without NADPH.
Cancer
Lett 1977 Jul
PMID:The ability of enteric bacteria to catalyze the covalent binding of bile acids and cholesterol to DNA and their in ability to metabolize benzo(a)pyrene to a binding product and to known metabolites. 1 50
Cancer
chemotherapeutic agents and antibacterial antibiotics are often given concomitantly. Daunorubicin, cytosine arabinoside, and three antibiotics (gentamicin, amikacin, and ticarcillin) were tested individually and in combinations to determine their antimicrobial activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa,
Klebsiella
pneumoniae, and Escherichia coli. These cytotoxic agents are commonly employed in the therapy of acute nonlymphocytic leukemia for remission induction therapy, and these antimicrobial agents are used in infection therapy. The maximum concentrations of the two cytotoxic drugs were chosen to be twice the known peak plasma levels of commonly employed dosage schedules. Neither of the
cancer
chemotherapeutic agents, alone or in combination, demonstrated bactericidal activity at the levels tested. However, in the presence of these agents, the antimicrobial activity of gentamicin and amikacin, although not that of ticarcillin, was depressed for 11 of 15 K. pneumoniae strains and 8 of 15 P. aeruginosa strains, but for none of the strains of E. coli. This level of decreased activity occasionally resulted in a minimal inhibitory concentration of the tested aminoglycoside well above the standard serum levels. Daunorubicin was more likely to antagonize gentamicin than was cytosine arabinoside.
...
PMID:Effect of two cancer chemotherapeutic agents on the antibacterial activity of three antimicrobial agents. 10 94
The cure rate of infections in
cancer
patients is adversely affected by neutropenia (less than 1,000/mm3). In particular, patients with severe neutropenia (less than 100/mm3) have shown a poor response to antibiotics. To overcome the adverse effects of neutropenia, tobramycin was given by continuous infusion and combined with intermittent carbenicillin. Tobramycin was given to a total daily dose of 300 mg/m2 and carbenicillin was given at a dose of 5 gm every four hours. There were 125 infectious episodes in 116
cancer
patients receiving myelosuppressive chemotherapy. The overall cure rate was 70%. Pneumonia was the most common infection and 61% of 59 episodes were cured. Gram-negative bacilli were the most common causative organisms and 69% of these infections were cured. The most common pathogen was
Klebsiella
pneumoniae and this, together with Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, accounted for 74% of all gram-negative bacillary infections. Response was not influenced by the initial neutrophil count, with a 62% cure rate for 39 episodes associated with severe neutropenia. However, failure of the neutrophil count to increase during therapy adversely affected response. Azotemia was the major side effect recognized, and it occurred in 11% of episodes. Major azotemia (serum creatinine greater than 2.5 mg/dl or BUN greater than 50 mg/dl) occurred in only 2%. Azotemia was not related to duration of therapy or serum tobramycin concentration. This antibiotic regimen showed both therapeutic efficacy and acceptable renal toxicity for these patients.
...
PMID:Continuous infusion tobramycin combined with carbenicillin for infections in cancer patients. 25 33
The clinical and radiological characteristics of 217 consecutive episodes of gram-negative bacillary pneumonia occurring in 189 adult
cancer
patients between November 1968 and December 1974 were analyzed. The majority of patients had acute leukemia (54%). Fever larger than or equal to 101 degrees F was the single most common symptom and sign of the presence of infection (90%). Next in frequency were crepitant rales (65%), cough (41%), dyspnea (19%) and chest pain (18%). Radiographic evidence of pneumonia was found in 83% of cases and it consisted mainly of alveolar infiltrates involving both lung fields and predominantly the bases. Up to one-third of the patients had normal chestx-ray examinations at the onset of infection, though they subsequently became abnormal in 42% of them. The majority of patients (81%) whose initial chest x-rays did not reveal the presence of pneumonia were neutropenic (less than 1000 circumlating neutrophils/mm3).
Klebsiella
sp. and Pseudomonas sp. were the most common infecting organisms. The overall cure rate was 61%; 70% for
Klebsiella
sp. infections and 64% for Pseudomonas sp. infections. Pulmonary abscesses occurred in 14% of the cases. Cures were related to the antibiotic sensitivity of the infecting organisms and to the number of circulating neutrophils during the period of infection. Best results were obtained with the administration of gentamicin, the newer aminoglycoside antibiotic sisomicin, tobramycin and amikacin, or the combination of gentamicin with carbenicillin or with cephalosporins. Early and vigorous therapy of gram-negative bacillary pneumonia with appropriate antibiotics has improved the prognosis of this infection at our institution.
...
PMID:Gram-negative bacillary pneumonia in the compromised host. 32 40
Neutropenic
cancer
patients were given carbenicillin, cephalothin, and gentamicin (CCG) during 51 evaluable episodes of fever of unknown origin. Patients in whom fever persisted despite these antibiotics and in whom infection had not been documented were randomized after 3 days either to discontinue antibiotics or to add chloramphenicol or clindamycin to CCG. During 19 episodes (37%) an infection was documented during the first 3 days, and during an additional 12 episodes (24%) there was a response in 3 days without a focus of infection or an identifiable organism. Two patients died within 3 days, and one developed renal failure. Seventeen febrile episodes (33%) were unresponsive to CCG after 3 days and were randomized.
Klebsiella
was cultured in 4 of 6 patients randomized to stop antibiotics within a week of cessation, and 3 of these patients died. Of 11 episodes randomized to continue antibiotics, all patients were alive at 2 weeks after randomization and 9 after 4 weeks. This study, albeit small, demonstrates no advantage to withholding treatment in unremitting fever of unknown etiology and indeed strongly suggests that in this clinical setting, antibiotics once started should be continued until bone marrow recovery.
...
PMID:A study of antibiotic therapy in fever of unknown origin in neutropenic cancer patients. 33 94
All of the febrile episodes occurring in 494 adults with acute leukemia were reviewed. There were an average of 2.39 febrile episodes per patient and the patients spent 28% of their days in the hospital with fever. Sixty-four percent of the febrile episodes were due to infection. The most common types of infection were disseminated infection and pneumonia, which together accounted for 69% of the total episodes of documented infection. The etiologic agent was identified in 73% of the documented infections and gram-negative bacilli were responsible for the great majority. The most common gram-negative bacilli causing infection were Escherichia coli,
Klebsiella
spp. and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. During the course of their leukemia, 31% of the patients had repeated episodes of infection caused by the same organism and 13% ahd repeated FUO's. Fever occurred most often when the patients had neutropenia (less than 500/mm3). The fatality rate from septicemia decreased from 84% in 1966 to 44% in 1972. The fatality rate for major infections caused by gram-positive cocci was 16%, for gram-negative bacilli was 37% and for fungi was 86%. Although infection remains a serious problem in leukemia patients, considerable progress has been made.
Cancer
1978 Apr
PMID:Fever and infection in leukemic patients: a study of 494 consecutive patients. 34 1
Antibiotic therapy in granulocytopenic
cancer
patients, the risk factors predisposing these patients to infection, and the signs, symptoms and types of infections occurring in these patients are reviewed. The four most commonly isolated organism at most
cancer
treatment centers are Escherichia coli,
Klebsiella
spp., Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus. Early antimicrobial therapy with broad-spectrum antibiotics before culture results are known produces cure rates of approximately 70%, regardless of the combination used. The most important predictor of response to any antibacterial regimen is a rise in the absolute granulocyte count. The current recommended fever regimen would be carbenicillin (or ticarcillin) with an aminoglycoside. The choice of an aminoglycoside depends on the prevailing organism sensitivities at a particular institution; in many cases, gentamicin sulfate is suitable. Addition of a cephalosporin to the two-drug regimen offers little increase in cure rates, except whem aminoglycoside-resistant Enterobacteriaceae are prevalent. Because of nephrotoxicity produced with combinations of cephalothin sodium and the aminoglycosides, cefazolin sodium would be the current cephalosporin of choice. An alternate third drug to be considered is co-trimoxazole, a broad-spectrum antimicrobial not yet commercially available in parenteral form. In the absence of a clinical response to appropriate antimicrobial therapy in documented infections, granulocyte transfusions may be indicated.
...
PMID:Empiric therapy of febrile granulocytopenic patients. 36 64
Because of the persistently high mortality from sepsis in
cancer
patients, a retrospective study was designed to identify the causative organisms and to determine the factors affecting the outcome of sepsis. A total of 84 episodes of septicemia in 61 children with
cancer
were studied. The more frequently isolated organisms were: Staphylococcus aureus (21.4%); Escherichia coli (18%);
Klebsiella
(7.1%); Pseudomonas (6%); and Bacteroides fragilis (6%). Other isolates included Proteus, Serratia, Acinetobacter, hemolytic Streptococcus, and Bacillus cereus. In 10.7% of septic episodes, mixed bacterial infections were documented. Twenty-four (28.6%) resulted in death; in 13 (54%) death occurred within 24 hours after admission. The fatality rate was high in cases associated with absolute polymorphonuclear leukocyte counts of less than 100/cu mm, in neoplastic relapse, and when infection with gram-negative, anaerobic and mixed bacterial flora occurred.
...
PMID:Septicemia in children with cancer. 37 Oct
Ninety-two patients with
cancer
with 100 infectious episodes were treated with netilmicin sulfate, a new aminoglycoside. Netilmicin was administered intravenously, either intermittently or by continuous infusion. The overall cure rate was 60%. Gram-negative bacilli were the most common causative organisms and the response rate for these infections was 32/53 (60%). The most common pathogens were Escherichia coli,
Klebsiella
pneumoniae, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Pneumonia, urinary tract infection, and septicemia were the most common types of infection treated and the response rates were 23/47 (49%), 19/21 (90%), and 9/17 (53%), respectively. Nephrotoxicity occurred in ten patients (6%) who had normal renal function initially. Netilmicin is an effective aminoglycoside with a spectrum of antibacterial activity similar to that of gentamicin sulfate and it appears to be less nephrotoxic.
...
PMID:Netilmicin in the treatment of infections in patients with cancer. 38 89
Two new aminoglycoside antibiotics, tobramycin and amikacin, were compared in a randomized study of the treatment of infections in patients with
cancer
. For the identified infections, the response rate for tobramycin was 60% and for amikacin was 64%. Pneumonia, urinary tract infection, and septicemia were the most frequent infections. Most (78%) of the identified pathogens were gram-negative bacilli;
Klebsiella
pneumoniae, Escherichia coli, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa were the most frequently isolated organisms. When only infections due to gram-negative bacilli were considered, 67% responded to tobramycin and 69% responded to amikacin. All infections except pneumonias had at least a 50% response rate to either antibiotic. The major form of toxicity of both antibiotics was azotemia and occurred in 22% of cases treated with tobramycin and in 20% treated with amikacin. Tobramycin and amikacin are equally effective in the treatment of gram-negative infections and have similar toxicity.
...
PMID:Comparison of amikacin and tobramycin in the treatment of infection in patients with cancer. 40 53
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