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Query: UMLS:C0519030 (
Klebsiella
)
21,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
From May 1989 to January 1991, 20 patients were investigated for antibiotic-associated acute diarrhea. Colonoscopy or rectosigmoidoscopy was performed in each patient. Cultures of colonic mucosal biopsies were carried out using conventional culture grounds (cystine-lactose-electrolyte-deficient). The aim of this study was to investigate the role of a gram negative bacillus:
Klebsiella
oxytoca. Among the 20 patients with antibiotic-associated acute diarrhea, 11 had bloody and mucus diarrhea and colitis ranging from a right-sided hemorrhagic to diffuse acute ulcerative or erosive colitis, 7 had a grossly normal colonic appearance, while 2 had mucus diarrhea and
pseudomembranous colitis
. Of colonic biopsies cultures obtained from 36 control patients, 15 had a normal colonic appearance, 15 had ulcerative or crohn's colitis, 6 had well-tolerated amoxicillin therapy.
Klebsiella
oxytoca was never found in the 36 control patients;
Klebsiella
oxytoca was noted among 8/11 patients with mucus-discharging and bloody diarrhea. These results suggest that antibiotic-associated, non
pseudomembranous colitis
is frequently associated with Klebsiella oxytoca infection, which may be the cause of this type of colitis.
...
PMID:[Post-antibiotic diarrheas: role of Klebsiella oxytoca]. 148 55
Thirty-five patients with various diarrheal syndromes and 22 controls were studied. All stool samples were carefully cultured for Clostridium difficile, using selective isolation media. Cytotoxin assays with proper antitoxin neutralization were done in MRC-5 cells. The stool samples were extracted four times, three times at pH 2 and once at pH 10, using CHCl3 or ether. Derivatizations of extracts were done with trichloroethanol, heptafluorobutyric anhydride, and heptafluorobutyric anhydride-ethanol, and all derivatives were analyzed by frequency-pulsed electron capture gas-liquid chromatography (FPEC-GLC). A dedicated computer was used to assist in both qualitative and quantitative data analysis. Isocaproic acid (iC6) was always found in stool from which C. difficile was isolated and was absent in C. difficile-negative specimens. p-Cresol was found frequently in both persons with
pseudomembranous colitis
and controls. Tryptamine was found in stool containing C. bifermentans. The FPEC-GLC profiles of persons with acute diarrhea were very different from those of normal persons. Diarrhea associated with adenovirus and rotavirus,
Klebsiella
spp., and Escherichia spp. showed different FPEC-GLC patterns. Stools from well persons consistently contained full-scale peaks of pyruvic, acetic, propionic, isobutyric, butyric, isovaleric, and valeric acids. In rotavirus stools isobutyric, isovaleric, and valeric acids were reduced in quantity from those found in control stools, whereas propionic and butyric acids were increased.
...
PMID:Studies of stools from pseudomembranous colitis, rotaviral, and other diarrheal syndromes by frequency-pulsed electron capture gas-liquid chromatography. 649 Aug 36
Although erythromycin was introduced into clinical medicine more than 28 years ago, the indications for its use continue to expand. This antibiotic has emerged as appropriate therapy for Legionnaires' disease, chronic bacterial prostatitis caused by Escherichia coli,
Klebsiella
pneumoniae, and Proteus species, enteritis and colitis produced by Campylobacter fetus, and soft tissue and pleuropulmonary anaerobic infections in which Bacteroides fragilis plays no role. In combination with an aminoglycoside, erythromycin has proven to be effective for perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis in patients undergoing elective colon surgery. Additional therapeutic indications continue to be explored. The renewed interest in erythromycin has resulted in a closer examination of its potential for toxicity. New untoward events attributed to erythromycin administration have been described. This antibiotic has produced both reversible hearing loss and
pseudomembranous colitis
. Erythromycin also possesses the ability to inhibit the degradation of theophylline.
...
PMID:Erythromycin. New indications and toxicities. 719 77
One-hundred-twenty infants under 1 year of age suffering from intractable diarrhoea were studied. They had received prior treatment in the form of antimicrobials (100 per cent), stool binding substance (50 percent), antimotility agents (50 per cent), and intravenous (IV) fluids (33 per cent). One-third of them had been hospitalised in peripheral hospitals. All of them had diarrhoea of more than 2 weeks' duration, protein energy malnutrition and were very ill. In addition vomiting, dehydration, fever, paralytic ileus, perianal excoriation and rectal prolapse were present in 44, 23, 33, 9, 47, and 3 per cent of the infants, respectively. Anaemia, multiple vitamin deficiencies, and pedal oedema were seen in 70, 10, and 3 per cent of infants, respectively. The infections documented were septicaemia (22 per cent), bronchopneumonia (6 per cent), meningitis (4 per cent), urinary tract infection (3 per cent) and acute supporative otitis media in 2 per cent of infants. Fifty-three per cent of infants had secondary lactose intolerance. Intolerance to milk protein, milk protein and soyabean and milk protein, as well as soyabean and chicken was seen in 4, 2, and 1 per cent cases, respectively. Aetiological agents isolated from stool culture were E. coli, (18 per cent),
Klebsiella
species (9 per cent), Shigella species (6 per cent), Salmonella typhimurium (2 per cent), Cholera mitschikom (1 per cent), Giardia lamblia (6 per cent), cryptosporidium (1 per cent), and E. histolytica (1 per cent). Candida albicans was grown in 18 per cent of infants.
Pseudomembranous colitis
was documented in 2 per cent cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Intractable diarrhoea of infancy and its management: modified cost effective treatment. 807 14
The aim of this study was to analyse the interest of proctosigmoidoscopy and biopsies microbiology in antibiotic-associated acute diarrhea in adults. Between February 1993 and October 1995, we have studied prospectively 24 patients with antibiotic-associated acute diarrhea. Ages ranged from 17 to 83 years. They had taken antibiotics: amoxicillin (n = 8) amoxicillin-clavulanic acid (n = 11), cephalosporinia (n = 3), cotrimoxazole (n = 1), macrolide (n = 1). For each patient, 2 stool cultures with Cytotoxin assay for Clostridium difficile and 3 fecal samples for parasitic enteropathogens were collected. Proctosigmoidoscopy with biopsies microbiology was carried out in all patients. Stool culture was always negative but colonic biopsies cultures were positive with
Klebsiella
oxytoca in 7 patients. Cytotoxin assay of C. difficile was positive in 11 patients. Proctosigmoidoscopy permitted also diagnosis of 2
pseudomembranous colitis
without cytotoxin assay of C. difficile. Proctosigmoidoscopy permitted diagnosis of 83% of antibiotic-associated acute diarrhea. Complementary to Cytotoxin assay of C. difficile, it should be necessary in antibiotic-associated acute diarrhea in adults.
...
PMID:[Value of proctosigmoidoscopy with bacteriological culture of colonic biopsies in the etiological diagnosis of post-antibiotic acute diarrhea in adults. Prospective study in 24 patients]. 953 68
Most cases of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea (AAD) are directly or indirectly due to the alteration of gut microflora by antibiotics. 'Functional' diarrhoea, usually limited to a mild and brief change in stool frequency, is considered as the most frequent pattern of AAD. Reduced carbohydrate fermentation and impaired metabolism of bile acids have been claimed as the potential causes of this transient digestive discomfort but a critical analysis of the data supporting these theories is necessary. Alternatively, changes in the gut flora ecosystem allow pathogens to proliferate. Clostridium difficile is responsible for approximately 10% of cases of AAD and almost all cases of antibiotic-associated
pseudomembranous colitis
. The level of evidence which supports the potential responsibility of other candidate pathogens (
Klebsiella
oxytoca, enterotoxin-producing Clostridium perfringens and Staphylococcus aureus, Candida) needs to be appreciated according to the updated postulates of causality relationships between a bacterium and a disease.
...
PMID:Microbial-gut interactions in health and disease. Antibiotic-associated diarrhoea. 1512 74
Nearly 25% of antibiotic associated diarrhoeas (AAD) is caused by Clostridium difficile, making it the commonest identified and treatable pathogen. Other pathogens implicated infrequently include Clostridium perfringens, Staphylococcus aureus,
Klebsiella
oxytoca, Candida spp. and Salmonella spp. Most mild cases of AAD are due to non-infectious causes which include reduced break down of primary bile acids and decrease metabolism of carbohydrates, allergic or toxic effects of antibiotic on intestinal mucosa and pharmacological effect on gut motility. The antibiotics most frequently associated with C. difficile associated diarrhoea are clindamycin, cephalosporin, ampicillin and amoxicillin. Clinical presentation may vary from mild diarrhoea to severe colitis and
pseudomembranous colitis
associated with high morbidity and mortality. The most sensitive and specific diagnostic test for C. difficile infection is tissue culture assay for cytotoxicity of toxin B. Commercial ELISA kits are available. Though less sensitive, they are easy to perform and are rapid. Withdrawal of precipitating antibiotic is all that is needed for control of mild to moderate cases. For severe cases of AAD, oral metronidazole is the first line of treatment, and oral vancomycin is the second choice. Probiotics have been used for recurrent cases.
...
PMID:Antibiotic associated diarrhoea: infectious causes. 1764 66
Antibiotic-induced diarrhea can be a significant source of morbidity.
Pseudomembranous colitis
, or Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea (CDAD), is an increasingly reported adverse effect of therapy with broad-spectrum antibiotics and can prolong the hospital stay of affected patients. Although sharing some of the same clinical symptoms as CDAD, antibiotic-associated hemorrhagic colitis is a distinctly separate form of colitis that is characterized by the absence of toxin-producing C. difficile and the presence of hematochezia. Colonoscopy usually reveals extensive hemorrhage and inflammation in the lamina propria, with lack of pseudomembranes. Spontaneous resolution usually occurs shortly after cessation of the antibiotic. Infection with
Klebsiella
oxytoca, a gram-negative facultative aerobic enterobacterium, has been suggested as a possible cause for antibiotic-associated hemorrhagic colitis. Some K. oxytoca strains isolated from patients with antibiotic-associated hemorrhagic colitis produce a cytotoxin that can induce epithelial cell death and may predispose certain patients to hemorrhagic colitis during exposure to antibiotics. We describe a patient who developed hemorrhagic colitis shortly after starting a course of amoxicillin therapy for sinusitis prophylaxis. His stool samples were negative for C. difficile antigens but grew K. oxytoca. The patient received supportive care in conjunction with antibiotic coverage consisting of metronidazole and piperacillin-tazobactam. He improved throughout his hospital stay and was discharged on hospital day 11. Given the increasing concern for CDAD, clinicians should be careful not to overlook other possible causes for antibiotic-induced diarrhea.
...
PMID:Amoxicillin-associated hemorrhagic colitis in the presence of Klebsiella oxytoca. 1796 68
Most of the cases of antibiotic-associated diarrhea are benign, self-limited and presumably related to functional consequences of the alteration of gut microflora. In few cases, changes in the gut flora ecosystem allow pathogens to proliferate. Clostridium difficile is responsible for approximately 10% of the cases of antibiotic-associated diarrhea in the community, most of the cases of antibiotic-associated colitis, and almost all the cases of
pseudomembranous colitis
. According to anatomoclinical increasing severity of the disease, C. difficile infections should be treated with metronidazole, vancomycin, intravenous immunoglobulins or colectomy.
Klebsiella
oxytoca is naturally resistant to bela-lactamins and causes occasionally heamorrhagic colitis, mimicking in some cases ischemic colitis.
...
PMID:[Antibiotic-associated diarrhea]. 1868 17
Most cases of nosocomial and antibiotic-associated diarrhoea are caused by alteration of the physiological gut microflora. This alteration leads to reduced microbial metabolism of carbohydrates and primary bile acids, resulting in osmotic or secretory forms of diarrhoea. Moreover, facultative enteropathogens may experience a growth advantage due to the antibiotic-induced microflora alteration that, in turn, can harm the gut mucosa by the toxins they produce. Clostridium difficile is the major infectious agent leading to
pseudomembranous colitis
. However, there is increasing evidence that certain other pathogens such as enterotoxin-producing Clostridium perfringens, Staphylococcus aureus and
Klebsiella
oxytoca can induce mucosal deterioration and diarrhoea after antibiotic use. But, as with C. difficile, these facultative enteropathogens can also be found in the healthy population. Their contribution to disease is, therefore, controversial and their presence in the stools of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea patients is often claimed to be mere colonisation. In this respect, the causal relationship of each suspected pathogen with the development of intestinal disease has to be proved clinically and experimentally.
...
PMID:Nosocomial and antibiotic-associated diarrhoea caused by organisms other than Clostridium difficile. 1930 68
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