15 research outputs found

    Efficacy of amphotericin B in a fat emulsion for the treatment of cryptococcal meningitis in AIDS patients

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    Several formulae have been developed in an attempt to reduce the toxicity of amphotericin B (AmB), but their high costs preclude widespread use. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of amphotericin B in a fat emulsion, i.e. Intralipid (AmB-IL), in 37 AIDS patients with cryptococcal meningitis (CM). We retrospectively reviewed data collected in a non-comparative open study between January 1999 and December 2001. The therapeutic cure was defined as complete resolution or improvement of the clinical symptoms or complete absence or improvement of the mycological alterations of the CSF. The outcomes were evaluated at 2 weeks, induction phase (IP), and at the end of treatment or consolidation phase (CP) with the last available CSF. Prior to the diagnosis of CM, 72% of patients had had one or more OI and 67.57% had a concomitant OI. The median CD4-cell count was 32 cells/mm³, the median leukocyte count in the CSF was 29 cells/mm³ and the median cumulative dose of AmB-IL was 1,200 mg (300-2,500). The therapeutic cure was 57.14% in the IP and 64.86% in the CP. During IP, 9 patients died (24.32%) and 4 (10.81%) during the CP (p=0.2). Thus, the overall mortality rate was 35.14%. AmB-IL, an inexpensive preparation, might be an alternative to conventional AmB. Some questions remain such as its compatibility, stability and level of toxicity. The benefit is especially important in developing countries, where no drugs other than AmB are available to treat systemic fungal infections

    Trends in bacterial resistance in a tertiary university hospital over one decade

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    The objective of this study was to investigate bacterial resistance trends, infection sites and the relationship between resistance and admittance to the intensive care unit (ICU). A total of 53,316 bacteria identified between 1999 and 2008 were evaluated. Multidrug resistance was characterized when gram-negative bacilli (GNB) presented resistance to two or more classes of antibiotics. Gram-positive cocci (CPC) were assessed for resistance to penicillin, oxacillin and vancomycin. GNB were the most common (66.1%) isolate. There was a 3.7-fold overall increase in multidrug resistant GNB over the study period; Acinetobacter baumanii and Staphylococcus aureus were the most prevalent. Highest increases were recorded for Kleb siella pneumoniae (14.6-fold) and enterococci (73-fold). The resistance rates for GNB and GPC were 36% and 51.7%, respectively. Most multidrug resistant GNB and GPC were recovered from ICU patients (p-value < 0.001). vancomycin-resistant enterococci were isolated during this decade with an increase of 18.7% by 2008. these data confirm the worldwide trend in multidrug bacterial resistance

    Primer registro de Perkinsus sp. (Protozoa, Apicomplexa) en el callo de hacha Atrina maura en Sinaloa, México

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    We evaluated the presence of the protozoan Perkinsus sp. by determining of its prevalence and level of infection in Atrina maura during 2012. Pen shells were collected per season beside an oyster farm located at Estero La Piedra, Sinaloa, Mexico, and analyzed by Ray's fluid thioglycollate medium and polymerase chain reaction. The higher prevalence (90%) and infection level (2.3) were obtained when temperature and salinity were higher. The Mackin scale showed a non-infected to moderate infection range. PCR was positive to Perkinsus sp. This is the first record of the presence of Perkinsus sp. in A. maura in Sinaloa, Mexico
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