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1.
Adolesc Med ; 11(2): 327-58, 2000 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10916128

ABSTRACT

Invasive disease due to group A beta-hemolytic streptococci (GABHS) can be divided into 3 categories of disease: streptococcal toxic shock syndrome (strepTSS), necrotizing fasciitis, and other invasive GABHS disease. Patients with strepTSS may have multiorgan failure within hours of presentation. Clindamycin and penicillin G should be used in combination for treatment of invasive GABHS disease. The mortality rate for menstrual staphylococcal toxic shock syndrome has decreased with early recognition and treatment, and removal of hyperabsorbent tampons from the market. Kawasaki syndrome (KS) is the most common cause of acquired heart disease in children in the U. S., and atypical forms have a higher mortality rate than typical KS. Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome is a zoonosis with an 80% mortality rate if the diagnosis is not made on first presentation and patients return to the hospital in shock. Children and adolescents with Lyme disease have an excellent prognosis and respond well to antimicrobial therapy. Cat scratch disease (CSD) is caused by Bartonella henselae and is transmitted by flea-infested kittens. CSD lymphadenopathy typically resolves spontaneously in 2ñ3 months; however, there is a 50% likelihood of resolution in 1 month if patients receive a 5-day treatment course with azithromycin.


Subject(s)
Exanthema , Adolescent , Cat-Scratch Disease/diagnosis , Cat-Scratch Disease/epidemiology , Cat-Scratch Disease/microbiology , Cat-Scratch Disease/therapy , Exanthema/epidemiology , Exanthema/etiology , Exanthema/therapy , Female , Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome/diagnosis , Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome/epidemiology , Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome/microbiology , Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome/therapy , Humans , Lyme Disease/diagnosis , Lyme Disease/epidemiology , Lyme Disease/microbiology , Lyme Disease/therapy , Male , Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome/diagnosis , Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome/epidemiology , Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome/microbiology , Mucocutaneous Lymph Node Syndrome/therapy , Shock, Septic/diagnosis , Shock, Septic/epidemiology , Shock, Septic/etiology , Shock, Septic/therapy , Staphylococcal Infections/diagnosis , Staphylococcal Infections/epidemiology , Staphylococcal Infections/etiology , Staphylococcal Infections/therapy , Streptococcal Infections/diagnosis , Streptococcal Infections/epidemiology , Streptococcal Infections/etiology , Streptococcal Infections/therapy , Streptococcus pyogenes/pathogenicity
4.
Pediatr Infect Dis J ; 17(6): 447-52, 1998 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9655532

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To determine the efficacy of azithromycin in the treatment of patients with typical cat-scratch disease. DESIGN: Prospective, randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial. SETTING: Large military medical center and its referring clinics. PATIENTS: Active duty military members and their dependents with laboratory-confirmed, clinically typical cat-scratch disease. INTERVENTION: Study participants assigned by randomization to treatment with oral azithromycin or placebo for 5 days. OUTCOME MEASURES: Lymph node volume was calculated using three dimensional ultrasonography at entry and at weekly intervals. The ultrasonographer was blinded to the treatment groups. Endpoint evaluations were predetermined as time in days to 80% resolution of the initial total lymph node volume. RESULTS: Demographic and clinical data showed that the azithromycin and placebo treatment groups were comparable at entry although the placebo group tended to be older. Eighty percent decrease of initial lymph node volume was documented in 7 of 14 azithromycin-treated patients compared with 1 of 15 placebo-treated controls during the first 30 days of observation (P = 0.026). After 30 days there was no significant difference in rate or degree of resolution between the two groups. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment of patients with typical cat-scratch disease with oral azithromycin for five days affords significant clinical benefit as measured by total decrease in lymph node volume within the first month of treatment.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Azithromycin/therapeutic use , Bartonella henselae , Cat-Scratch Disease/drug therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Double-Blind Method , Female , Humans , Logistic Models , Lymph Nodes/diagnostic imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Ultrasonography
5.
Pediatr Infect Dis J ; 17(4): 271-7; discussion 277-9, 1998 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9576380

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The management of young children with fever without source is controversial, and differences between physician specialties have been noted previously. The emergence of penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae, the sharp decline in invasive Haemophilus influenzae infections in immunized populations and publication of practice guidelines have potentially altered physician practices. OBJECTIVE: To determine the present practice preferences of pediatricians, family medicine physicians (FP) and emergency medicine physicians (EP). METHODS: We mailed a checklist survey to 1600 randomly selected pediatricians, family medicine practitioners (FP) and emergency medicine physicians (EP) in the United States and replicated the methodology of a 1991/1992 survey. Physicians were asked about their evaluation and management of children of various ages (3 weeks, 7 weeks, 4 months and 16 months) with fever without source. RESULTS: Most primary care physicians would admit the 3- and 7-week-old infants. For the 4-month-old infant 59% of EP, 45% of pediatricians and 28% of FP would give empiric antibiotic(s) as an outpatient (P=0.005 for FP compared with pediatricians and P=0.02 for EP compared with pediatricians). The majority of physicians would manage the 16-month-old child as an outpatient without antibiotic therapy. Ceftriaxone was the preferred antibiotic for outpatient empiric therapy. There was a 3-fold increase (28% vs. 9%) for pediatricians in the use of empiric outpatient antibiotics for the 7-week-old infant in the present survey compared with the 1991/1992 survey. CONCLUSIONS: Physicians in the United States generally agree in their management of the young febrile infant, but with increasing patient age there is considerable variation. FP were the least aggressive in their evaluation and EP were the most aggressive.


Subject(s)
Emergency Medicine , Family Practice , Fever of Unknown Origin/diagnosis , Fever of Unknown Origin/therapy , Pediatrics , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/statistics & numerical data , Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Fever of Unknown Origin/drug therapy , Health Care Surveys , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Patient Admission , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Surveys and Questionnaires
9.
Hawaii Med J ; 56(7): 176-7, 1997 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9264206

ABSTRACT

An 11-year-old boy in Hawaii passed mucus and a moving object in his stool. The object was identified as a segment of the fish tapeworm Diphyllobothrium species which is not indigenous to Hawaii. Diphyllobothrium ova were also found in the stool. The only raw fish he recalled eating in previous months were tuna sushi and lomi-lomi salmon which usually contains raw but previously frozen salmon. Of these two fish, only salmon which is not native to Hawaiian waters, has been incriminated as a significant source of diphyllobothrium fish tapeworm infection. Freezing kills this parasite, however, we speculate that the raw fish in the lomi-lomi salmon that our patient had eaten had not been pre-frozen or was not adequately pre-frozen. Eating raw salmon without certainty that it has been adequately pre-frozen carries the risk of diphyllobothriasis or fish tapeworm infection.


Subject(s)
Diphyllobothriasis/etiology , Food Parasitology , Meat , Salmon , Animals , Child , Diphyllobothriasis/parasitology , Humans , Male , Meat/parasitology
10.
Pediatr Infect Dis J ; 16(2): 163-79, 1997 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9041596

ABSTRACT

Recent advancements and developments in molecular biotechnology have allowed more precise reclassification of many microorganisms. With the use of these new taxonomy tools, several organisms previously thought to belong to other genera have been recently described as bartonellae. Of the 11 organisms now described as Bartonella spp., only four have been shown to be pathogenic for humans. Table 1 lists the four Bartonella human pathogens along with the their known epidemiology and the scope and range of disease associated with each. All are now considered to be bacteria and can be grown on blood-enriched agar although primary isolation in some may best be achieved in cell tissue culture. B. bacilliformis infection is limited to certain geographic regions in South America where the only human reservoir and the sandfly vector(s) that spreads the disease reside together. Specific antibiotic treatment is dramatically effective in treating the highly fatal, acute intraerythrocytic hemolytic form of the disease, but their effectiveness in treating the vascular proliferative forms (verruga peruana) or the chronic asymptomatic, bacteremic, carrier state of the disease has not been effective. This disease should remain confined to its present endemic geographic areas in South American unless asymptomatic bacteremic persons from these areas migrate to areas where sandflies and humans exist that are capable of establishing this infection in new endemic areas. B. quintana and B. henselae cause a wide range of clinical diseases in humans, the type and extent of which varies significantly with the immune status of the host. In immunocompetent hosts the pathologic response is granulomatous, suppurative, extracellular and intracellular, generally self-limited and usually unresponsive to antibiotic treatment, even to those drugs to which the organism is shown to be sensitive in vitro. In contrast, in immunocompromised hosts the pathologic response is vasculoproliferative, organisms may be seen intracellularly but they are often seen in abundance in extracellular clumps and infection is usually progressive and fatal unless treated. In these patients clinical response to treatment with drugs that are effective in vitro against these organisms has usually been dramatic. Of these agents those that penetrate cells and are found in high concentrations intracellularly, such as erythromycin, clarithromycin, azithromycin, rifampin, doxycycline and gentamicin, appear to be most effective. These agents not only appear to provide the most dramatic treatment response in patients with BA, BP and PRFB and other manifestations of B. henselae (and B. quintana as well) in immunocompromised persons, they appear to be the most promising agents for treatment of persons with both typical and atypical CSD. Further studies will be necessary to more clearly elucidated the mechanisms responsible for the diverse clinical presentations of infection with these organisms in human hosts relative to their immune status. In addition clarification of the epidemiology of B. elizabethae infections in humans may be helpful in understanding the nature of infection with Bartonella organisms.


Subject(s)
Bartonella henselae , Cat-Scratch Disease , Bartonella henselae/isolation & purification , Bartonella henselae/pathogenicity , Cat-Scratch Disease/complications , Cat-Scratch Disease/diagnosis , Cat-Scratch Disease/epidemiology , Cat-Scratch Disease/history , History, 20th Century , Humans
13.
Pediatrics ; 97(6 Pt 2): 960-3, 1996 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8637782

ABSTRACT

Intramuscular benzathine (BZ) penicillin G has been accepted as the gold standard for treatment of patients with streptococcal pharyngitis since it was first introduced in 1952. Unfortunately, it has been associated with pain and tenderness at the site of injection. Efforts to lessen this by combining it with varied quantities of procaine (PC) penicillin G have been successful, decreasing the incidence of significant local reactions to 5% to 10%, little more than that seen with PC penicillin alone. A preparation containing 600,000 U BZ penicillin G and 600,000 U PC penicillin in 2 mL has been marketed since the mid-1950s as CR Bicillin 600/600 but the content of BZ penicillin G has been considered adequate only for children who weigh < 60 pounds. This prompted the evaluation of a preparation containing 900,000 U BZ penicillin G plus 300,000 U PC penicillin G in a 2-mL injection. Of 400 children with streptococcal pharyngitis 100 each received this preparation, 600,000 U BZ penicillin G alone in 1 mL, 1.2 million U BZ penicillin G alone in 2 mL or 600,000 U BZ penicillin G plus 600,000 U PC penicillin G in 2 mL. Clinical response was equal in all four groups; all patients were well in 36 to 48 hours. The two preparations containing PC penicillin G had significantly less severe local reactions and throat cultures were negative in all by 48 hours; it remained positive in some patients who received BZ penicillin G alone after 72 hours. The cure rate in patients receiving the 900, 000/300,000 combination of BZ and PC penicillin G was equal to that in patients who received 1.2 million U BZ penicillin G with these added advantages. This combination offers optimal parenteral treatment for streptococcal pharyngitis in all children who weigh < 140 pounds and it has been marketed for this purpose since 1976.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/therapeutic use , Penicillin G Benzathine/administration & dosage , Penicillin G Benzathine/therapeutic use , Pharyngitis/drug therapy , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Humans , Injections, Intramuscular , Pharyngitis/microbiology , Streptococcus pyogenes/isolation & purification
15.
Ann Pharmacother ; 30(2): 130-2, 1996 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8835043

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To rate the perception of taste, texture, smell and aftertaste of various brands of penicillin VK and amoxicillin. DESIGN: Oral, liquid formulations of three brands of penicillin VK (PenVee K, V-Cillin-K, VeeTids) and three brands of amoxicillin (Amoxil, Trimox, Wymox) were evaluated for smell, texture, taste, and aftertaste by 30 volunteers in a blind study. Each category was scored on a scale of 1 to 5. The order in which the drugs were sampled was randomized for the first three groups of five participants. The order then was reversed for the remaining three groups of participants. SETTING: A 537-bed US Army teaching hospital. PARTICIPANTS: Participants included 30 healthy adult volunteers from the Departments of Pediatrics, Nursing, and Pharmacy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Drugs received cumulative scores in each category, as well as an overall total score ranking. The data were analyzed using one-way ANOVA for repeated measures with a post hoc Duncan's multiple range test to determine significant differences between individual means. RESULTS: Overall, Trimox and Amoxil scored significantly higher than the remaining drugs. Although V-Cillin-K scored highest in the smell category, its score was significantly below those of Trimox and Amoxil in the texture, taste, aftertaste, and overall categories. Overall, the three penicillin VK solutions scored lower than the three amoxicillin suspensions, with PenVee K ranking the lowest. Among the penicillin VK solutions, V-Cillin-K scored significantly higher overall than the other two penicillin VK solutions. CONCLUSIONS: Overall, all three amoxicillin oral, liquid suspensions that were studied scored significantly better than the three penicillin VK solutions.


Subject(s)
Amoxicillin/administration & dosage , Penicillin V/administration & dosage , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Odorants , Suspensions , Taste
16.
J Pediatr ; 127(1): 23-6, 1995 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7608806

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To study the etiology and seroepidemiology of cat-scratch disease (CSD) in Hawaii. METHODS: Blood and fine-needle aspirate (FNA) from the lymph nodes of 39 consecutive patients with clinical CSD were cultured for Bartonella henselae, and blood samples from index cats, stray cats, and dogs were cultured and their sera were tested by indirect fluorescence antibody test for antibodies to B. henselae and Afipia felis. Sera from age- and sex-matched human subjects without cat exposure served as controls. RESULTS: Warthin-Starry staining showed positive results in only 4 of 32 FNAs, and B. henselae was isolated from only one FNA specimen. All of 38 patients who had two or more sera tested had elevated titers of antibody to B. henselae. Only 1 of 48 human control sera had antibody to B. henselae. Of 31 kittens, 21 had positive blood culture results and elevated antibody titers to B. henselae. Of three adult cats, all had negative blood culture results, but they had serologic evidence of past infection. Of 23 adult stray cats, 18 had elevated titers of antibody to B. henselae, but in only one was the blood culture result positive. Results of IFA tests were marginally positive for A. felis in 1 of 29 patients with CSD and in one adult stray cat and one dog. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that the B. henselae IFA test is both highly sensitive and specific for the detection of infection caused by B. henselae and for the laboratory diagnosis of CSD, and that FNA is seldom helpful in confirming the diagnosis. We further demonstrated that CSD in Hawaii is due to B. henselae and that infection is directly linked to the scratch or bite of a kitten. Older cats seldom have bacteremia but often have serologic evidence of past infection. Our study fails to implicate dogs in the epidemiology of CSD in Hawaii, and A. felis was not etiologically implicated in CSD in the human subjects and animals we studied.


Subject(s)
Cat-Scratch Disease/epidemiology , Cat-Scratch Disease/etiology , Adolescent , Adult , Animals , Bartonella/immunology , Bartonella/isolation & purification , Cat-Scratch Disease/blood , Cats , Child , Child, Preschool , Dogs , Female , Fluorescent Antibody Technique , Hawaii/epidemiology , Humans , Immunoglobulin G/immunology , Incidence , Infant , Male , Prospective Studies , Seroepidemiologic Studies
20.
Pediatr Infect Dis J ; 13(2): 87-9, 1994 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8190556

ABSTRACT

We conducted a blinded taste test evaluating 12 antimicrobial suspensions by smell, texture, taste, aftertaste and overall acceptance. Drugs received cumulative scores in each category as well as a total score ranking. Overall Lorabid scored highest but not significantly higher than Keflex, Suprax and Ceclor, all of which score higher than the other test drugs. Cefzil and Augmentin scored just below this group of drugs and higher than all other test drugs. Vantin was inferior to these drugs primarily because of its low score in aftertaste. It was ranked along with V-Cillin-K, Veetids, Sulfatrim and Pediazole, the lowest scoring group of drugs other than Dynapen which scored lower than all other test drugs. No difference overall was detected between the two penicillin VK suspensions evaluated, V-Cillin-K and Veetids.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents , Anti-Infective Agents , Drug Combinations , Suspensions , Taste , Analysis of Variance , Cefixime , Cefotaxime/analogs & derivatives , Ceftizoxime/analogs & derivatives , Cephalosporins , Child , Child, Preschool , Humans , Infant , Single-Blind Method , Smell , Cefpodoxime , Cefprozil
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