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1.
Indian J Med Microbiol ; 2011 Jan-Mar; 29(1): 60-62
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-143778

ABSTRACT

Linezolid, a viable alternative to vancomycin against methicillin resistant staphylococcal isolates, has been in use for a decade around the globe. However, resistance against staphylococci remains extremely rare and unreported from most of the Asian countries. Herein, we report two cases of linezolid resistant, coagulase negative staphylococcal sepsis for the first time from India. The first case was an 18-year-old burn patient, who, after a major graft surgery, landed in sepsis, and linezolid resistant Staphylococcus cohnii with an minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of >256 μg/ml by both broth microdilution and Etest, was isolated from multiple blood cultures. The second patient was a 60-year-old male with an intracranial bleed and sepsis, from whose blood cultures, linezolid resistant Staphylococcus kloosii was repeatedly isolated. Linezolid MIC was >32 μg/ml by broth microdilution and >16 μg/ml by Etest.


Subject(s)
Acetamides/pharmacology , Adolescent , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Coagulase/metabolism , Drug Resistance, Bacterial , Female , Humans , India , Male , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Middle Aged , Oxazolidinones/pharmacology , Sepsis/microbiology , Staphylococcal Infections/microbiology , Staphylococcus/classification , Staphylococcus/drug effects , Staphylococcus/isolation & purification
2.
Indian J Med Microbiol ; 2010 Apr-Jun; 28(2): 169-171
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-143684

ABSTRACT

Invasive listeriosis predominantly affects pregnant women, neonates, elderly and people with a compromised immune function. For more than 80 years since the discovery of Listeria in 1924, only a few reports of invasive listeriosis in humans have emerged from India, with all of them in patients having an underlying predisposition. We, however, report Listeria monocytogenes meningoencephalitis in an immunocompetent, previously healthy, 20-month-old female child with no underlying predisposition. The patient showed poor response to empirical treatment with vancomycin and ceftriaxone but improved dramatically after substitution with ampicillin and amikacin. She had a complete recovery other than left lateral rectus palsy that persisted.

3.
Indian J Exp Biol ; 2004 Feb; 42(2): 131-7
Article in English | IMSEAR | ID: sea-61689

ABSTRACT

This paper gives an over view of the use of cellular automata (CA) model of drug therapy for HIV infection. Nonuniform CA is employed to simulate drug treatment of HIV infection, where each computational domain may contain different CA rules, in contrast to normal uniform CA models. Ordinary (or partial) differential equation models are insufficient to describe the two extreme time scales involved in HIV infection (days and decades), as well as the implicit spatial heterogeneity. Zorzenon and Coutinho [Phy Rev Lett, 16 (2001) 1] reported a cellular automata approach to simulate three-phase patterns of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection consisting of primary response, clinical latency and onset of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). But here we present a related model, based on non-uniform CA to study the dynamics of drug therapy of HIV infection. The main aim in this model is to simulate the four phases (acute, chronic, drug treatment responds and onset of AIDS). The results shown here indicate that both simulations (with and without treatments) evolve to the relatively same steady state (characteristics of Wolfram's class II behavior). Different kinds of drug therapies can also be simulated in this model, which can be found useful for developing a proper drug therapy.


Subject(s)
Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use , Cell Physiological Phenomena , Computer Simulation , HIV/drug effects , HIV Infections/drug therapy , Humans , Models, Biological
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