80 Matching Annotations
  1. Jun 2017
    1. bola originally jumped to the human species from close contact with fruit bats, their excretions, or their blood (5). After that, transmission is through human-human contact, more specifically through direct contact with bodily fluids and/or anything carrying these fluids

      Ebola Mode of Transmission

  2. May 2017
    1. Primary advantages over an ampicillin-gentamicincombination are its narrower spectrum of antimicrobial activity and lower cost. However, high doses of penicillin G must be used for the treatment of Group B streptococcal disease for two reasons. First, the MIC of penicillin G for Group B Streptococcus is relatively high, 4-10 fold greater (range 0.01-0.4 µg/ml) than that for group A streptococcal strains

      Antibiotic treatment for Strep B

  3. Apr 2017
    1. For example, use may depend on whether a nasocranial infection is present, or it may need to be avoided in patients who are likely to be carriers of MRSA (eg, those with diabetes, those who use illicit drugs, those undergoing hemodialysis).
    2. Empiric antibiotics should be started immediately. Initial antimicrobial therapy should be broad-based, to cover aerobic gram-positive and gram-negative organisms and anaerobes. A foul smell in the lesion strongly suggests the presence of anaerobic organisms. The maximum doses of the antibiotics should be used,

      CONSIDERATIONS IN TREATING NF WITH ANTIBIOTICS

    1. Data from retrospective studies[138,139] and one observational prospective study[140] of patients with severe pneumococcal bacteremia have suggested that combination therapy may be associated with reduced mortality, as compared with β-lactam monotherapy, irrespective of the level of resistance to penicillins.

      Combination theraphy indicated to be useful for S. pneumoniae even without resistance to penicillin

    2. The majority of strains with reduced susceptibility to penicillin are more susceptible to certain third-generation cephalosporins, such as cefotaxime or ceftriaxone, but there is always some cross-resistance within the β-lactam group, and resistance to these drugs is increasing

      Strains with resistance to penicillin treated with 3rd generation CEPAHLOSPORINS such as CEFOTAXIME/CEFTRIAXONE but resistance is also increasing (numbers??)

    3. Penicillin remains the drug of choice for fully sensitive strains with minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) < 0.1 µg/L. Also strains with moderately decreased susceptibility (MIC 0.1-1.0 µg/L) can be effectively treated with penicillin G, provided that the dose and dosing intervals are adequate

      Effectiveness of penicillin on S. pneumoniae (VIRIDANS)

  4. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
    1. These casereports suggest the following risk factors for the development ofpneumococcal NF – a history of diabetes, systemic lupuserythematosus, immunosuppression, alcohol use, coronaryartery disease and administration of intramuscular nonsteroidalanti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs)

      Causes of NF by S. pneumoniae

    1. The recommended course of treatment is the use of vancomycin, linezolid, or daptomycin to treat MRSA and gram-positive bacteria, an agent to treat anaerobic bacteria (e.g., clindamycin), and an agent to treat gram-negative bacteria. Alternatively, anaerobic and gram-negative bacteria can be treated with one drug that covers both

      Antibiotic regimen for NF

    1. neumolysin is produced as a 52 kDa soluble protein that oligomerizes in the membrane of target cells to form a large ring-shaped transmembrane pore. The pore is 260 Å in diameter and is composed of approximately 40 monomer subunits. During its conversion from a soluble monomer to a membrane-inserted oligomer, pneumolysin undergoes a series of spectacular structural changes42. The oligomers are thought to be responsible for the cytolytic activity of the toxin and the plethora of cell-modulatory activities that are evident at sub-lytic con-centrations. These activities include: inhibition of ciliary beating on respiratory epithelium and brain ependyma; inhibition of the phagocyte respiratory burst; and induc-tion of cytokine synthesis and CD4+ T-cell activation and chemotaxis43,44. Site-directed mutagenesis has shown that pneumolysin activates the classical complement pathway independently of its cell-modulatory activity45

      possible mechanism of protein virulence

    2. one of the common forms of pneumococcal disease, however, promote pneumococcal transmission, which implies that the virulence characteristics of the pneumococcus are prob-ably adaptations that increase its persistence within a host during colonization
    1. bacterium Salmonella typhi.

      Salmonella Typhi = typhoid fever Salmonella Typhimurium = was the most common cause of food poisoning, now second to Entertiditis - causes typhoid-like symptoms in mice but non-fatal symptoms in humans Salmonella Entertiditis = most common cause of food poisoning in the last 20 years, very good at infection chickens without causing symptoms, so the bacteria spreads from hen to hen very quickly

    2. "You wouldn't call him 'patient zero,' but if you consider his impact in terms of the outbreak, he was critical in the spread of the disease,"

      someone may have had it before him, but he was critical in spreading the disease - why patient zero is not really helpful. Index and primary case identification have more significance.

    3. Avian influenza viruses don't replicate well in humans, human influenza viruses don't replicate well in birds, but if a bird virus and a human virus gets into a pig, you can have reassortment and get totally new strains out,
    4. He was not ill with symptoms during his travels, according to the WHO, but once he fell ill, he went to the Samsung Medical Center in Seou

      May still have been infectious before symptoms showed, could have spread during travels before becoming ill