Journal of infection and chemotherapy : official journal of the Japan Society of Chemotherapy
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J. Infect. Chemother. · Jun 2005
Multicenter StudyMulticenter prospective study of procalcitonin as an indicator of sepsis.
The clinical significance of serum procalcitonin (PCT) for discriminating between bacterial infectious disease and nonbacterial infectious disease (such as systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS)), was compared with the significance of endotoxin, beta-D: -glucan, interleukin (IL)-6, and C-reactive protein (CRP) in a multicenter prospective study. The concentrations of PCT in patients with systemic bacterial infection and those with localized bacterial infection were significantly higher than the concentrations in patients with nonbacterial infection or noninfectious diseases. In addition, PCT, endotoxin, IL-6, and CRP concentrations were significantly higher in patients with bacterial infectious disease than in those with nonbacterial infectious disease (P<0.001, P<0.005, P<0.001, and P<0.001, respectively). ⋯ Areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves (POCs) were 0.84 for PCT, 0.60 for endotoxin, 0.77 for IL-6, and 0.78 for CRP in the combined group of patients with bacterial infectious disease and those with nonbacterial infectious disease, and the area under the ROC for PCT was significantly higher than that for endotoxin (P<0.001). In patients diagnosed with bacteremia based on clinical findings, the positive rate of diagnosis with PCT was 70.2%, while that of blood culture was 42.6%. PCT is thus essential for discriminating bacterial infection from SIRS, and is superior in this respect to conventional serum markers and blood culture.
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J. Infect. Chemother. · Feb 2005
Kinetic analysis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis-specific cytokine production by PBMC in adults after BCG vaccination.
Although bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG) has been used worldwide as the only vaccine for tuberculosis, its protective efficacy in human adults is controversial. To investigate human immunological responses to Mycobacterium tuberculosis after BCG vaccination, we analyzed IFN-gamma and IL-10 production by peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from health-care workers five times throughout the year after BCG vaccination. Of 449 health-care workers, 36 (8.0%) were negative by the tuberculin skin test, and of these, 20 were vaccinated with BCG. ⋯ The IFN-gamma level of the vaccinated group at week 0 was significantly lower than that of the controls. The mean IL-10 production in response to PPD reached a peak at week 2, and then declined to its lowest point at week 8. These results indicate that the BCG vaccine can induce a type I cytokine response to M. tuberculosis in most tuberculin skin-test-negative adults at week 8, suggesting the immunological efficacy of vaccination.
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J. Infect. Chemother. · Dec 2004
Antimicrobial therapy in community-acquired pneumonia among emergency patients in a university hospital in Japan.
As antimicrobial therapy for pneumonia has not been well established in Japan, this study was designed to obtain a more definitive standard for antimicrobial treatment of this condition. Two hundred and thirty-one emergency patients admitted to Kyorin University Hospital between January 1998 and December 2000 were retrospectively analyzed in respect to their age, underlying disease, causative organism, and primary treatment with antimicrobial agent. Furthermore, the severity and prognosis were analyzed for those patients who had not responded to initial treatment with antimicrobial agents. ⋯ Complications associated with antimicrobial treatment were observed in those patients with K. pneumoniae isolates who also had severe pneumonia and were frequently treated with penicillin. Furthermore, increased mortality rates were observed in patients not responding well to the initial treatment with antimicrobial agents. Thus, the selection of appropriate initial antimicrobial agents is an important factor affecting the prognosis of patients with community-acquired pneumonia.
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J. Infect. Chemother. · Oct 2004
Experimental confirmation of Serratia marcescens contamination in multiple-dose vials of heparin-saline solution.
The initial contamination of heparin-saline solution (HS) in multiple-dose vials (MDVs) by Serratia marcescens was experimentally investigated using various isolates. Isolates I2 and S1 were from blood specimens from patients with a hospital-acquired infection (HAI). Isolates I13 and FHSM9043 were from urine and blood specimens, respectively, from patients without HAI. ⋯ For exposures of 24 h and 72 h at 4 degrees C to HS with 1% benzyl alcohol as a preservative in MDVs, viable cells of all isolates tested were detected at MIS values of 1 s and 10 s cfu/ml, respectively, increases three orders of magnitude smaller than those of reference strain IFO3736. These results suggest that S. marcescens isolates are readily carried over into the HS of MDVs by piercing a wet, contaminated rubber septum with a syringe needle. Also, despite the sterilization action of 1% benzyl alcohol, the organism persistently survived at 4 degrees C, even when initial contamination was with a small amount of inoculum.
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J. Infect. Chemother. · Aug 2004
Clinical implication of prolonged fever in children with cat scratch disease.
Cat scratch disease, caused by Bartonella henselae, typically presents with a localized lymphadenopathy with a brief period of fever and general symptoms. However, there are atypical cases with a wide spectrum of clinical manifestations including prolonged fever (> or =37.5 degrees C, for more than 7 days), or with systemic complication, or without lymphadenopathy. We analyzed relationships among those manifestations in children with cat scratch disease. ⋯ By multiple regression analysis, the duration of fever was significantly associated with both the absence of lymphadenopathy and the presence of complications. The child suffering from cat scratch disease without lymphadenopathy or with complication tends to have prolonged fever. Conversely, when a child has a prolonged fever of unknown origin, possibility of cat scratch disease should be considered, and a search for underlying systemic complications is recommended for prompt diagnosis and appropriate treatment.