276 Matching Annotations
  1. May 2017
    1. eral indicators suggest the incidence is rising particu-larly in the UK and efforts to curb the spread ofantimicrobial resistance, whilst well intended, may haveinadvertently led to a resurgence in this severe dise

      concerns

    2. ncrease in the penetration of bacteria intothe tonsillar epithelium during cases of infectious mono-nucleosis and associations of IFND with Epstein Barr virusand the primary sore throat are due to reports of theMonospot or Paul–Bunnell tests for heterophile antibodybeing positive.

      often causes serious disease in connection with other infection

    1. al infection begins in the oropharynx then spreads through the lymphatic vessels. Following this primary infection, thrombophlebitis (swelling) of the internal jugular vein (IJV) develops. The final phase of the disease occurs when septic emboli (pus-containing tissue) migrate from their original location in the body to various organs. The lungs are most co

      symptoms of sequelae

  2. Apr 2017
    1. Necrotizing fasciitis should be treated in an ICU. Extensive (sometimes repeated) surgical debridement is required. A recommended initial antibiotic regimen is a β-lactam (often a broad-spectrum drug until etiology is confirmed by culture) plus clindamycin. Although streptococci remain susceptible to β-lactam antibiotics, animal studies show that penicillin is not always effective against a large bacterial inoculum because the streptococci are not rapidly growing and lack penicillin-binding proteins, which are the target of penicillin activity.

      treatment - general

    1. Viridans streptococci, mutans group Streptococcus mutans (human plaque) Streptococcus cricetus (rodent plaque, human) Streptococcus downei (monkey plaque) Streptococcus ferus(rodent plaque) Streptococcus macaccae (monkey plaque) Streptococcus ratti(rodent, human plaque) Streptococcus sobrinus(human plaque) Viridans streptococci, oral groupStreptococcus salivarius (human) Streptococcus vestibularius(human) Streptococcus sanguinis(human) Streptococcus parasanguinis(human) Streptococcus gordonii(human) Streptococcus anginosus(human) Streptococcus constellatus(human) Streptococcus intermedius(human) Streptococcus mitis(human) Streptococcus oralis(human) Streptococcus crista(human) Streptococcus infantis(human) Streptococcus perois (human)

      many species

    2. viridans Streptococcus, or of unknown identity (basically includes all cultures other than pneumococci, ß-hemolytic streptococci, and nutritionally variant streptococci), inoculate the following media. Inoculate a trypticase soy 5% sheep blood agar plate by streaking a heavy inoculum onto one-fourth of the plate and streak the remaining portion for isolated colonies. Place a vancomycin disk on the heaviest part of the inoculum, and put the plate into a candle extinction jar or a CO2 incubator for 18 to 24 h at 35C.

      growing conditions

    1. biotic usage drives resistance holds true for VGS, and there are numerous studies that have shown direct correlations between both penicillin and macrolide usage and the development of resistance in VGS.

      antibiotic resistance