51 research outputs found

    Persistent systemic microbial translocation, inflammation, and intestinal damage during Clostridioides difficile infection

    Get PDF
    Background. Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) might be complicated by the development of nosocomial bloodstream infection (n-BSI). Based on the hypothesis that alteration of the normal gut integrity is present during CDI, we evaluated markers of microbial translocation, inflammation, and intestinal damage in patients with CDI. Methods. Patients with documented CDI were enrolled in the study. For each subject, plasma samples were collected at T0 and T1 (before and after CDI therapy, respectively), and the following markers were evaluated: lipopolysaccharide-binding protein (LPB), EndoCab IgM, interleukin-6, intestinal fatty acid binding protein (I-FABP). Samples from nonhospitalized healthy controls were also included. The study population was divided into BSI+/BSI- and fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) +/FMT- groups, according to the development of n-BSI and the receipt of FMT, respectively. Results. Overall, 45 subjects were included; 8 (17.7%) developed primary n-BSI. Markers of microbial translocation and intestinal damage significantly decreased between T0 and T1, however, without reaching values similar to controls (P < .0001). Compared with BSI-, a persistent high level of microbial translocation in the BSI+ group was observed. In the FMT+ group, markers of microbial translocation and inflammation at T1 tended to reach control values. Conclusions. CDI is associated with high levels of microbial translocation, inflammation, and intestinal damage, which are still present at clinical resolution of CDI. The role of residual mucosal perturbation and persistence of intestinal cell damage in the development of n-BSI following CDI, as well as the possible effect of FMT in the restoration of mucosal integrity, should be further investigated

    Transient stabbing headache from an acute thalamic hemorrhage

    Get PDF
    Stabbing headache can be encountered in both primary and secondary forms, but has been infrequently reported among patients with stroke, and is not known to be associated with a small well-circumscribed brain lesion. A 95-year-old woman taking warfarin presented with the sudden onset of stabbing headache strictly in the right frontal and supraorbital regions, along with gait imbalance and dysarthria. Neuroimaging revealed a small left thalamic hematoma. This association of an acute thalamic lesion with stabbing headache in the contralateral trigeminal distribution is discussed, along with a brief review of stabbing headache occurring in cerebrovascular disease

    Strategies for preventing group B streptococcal infections in newborns: A nation-wide survey of Italian policies

    Get PDF

    The influence of the SOS response on the activity of 4-quinolones and Zidovudine against some strains of enterobacteria

    No full text
    The 4-Quinolones are known to induce the SOS response. This should also be the case with AZT (Zidovudine) which has the same bactericidal mechanism. SOS response might make the bacteria more sensitive or more resistant to subsequent doses of quinolones and AZT. NA (Nalidixic acid), the first quinolone of the early 1960s, sensitises a strain of E. coli isolated from the urine of patients with cystopyelitis and the E. coli AB1157 wild type strain which is a well-known SOS inducer. In this case, the SOS system is not involved but only the recombination repair mechanisms which make the bacteria more susceptible to further damage by NA. On the contrary, CPX (Ciprofloxacin) protects E. coli from further exposure to antibiotics. Therefore the SOS response induction assists the bacteria in recovering from the DNA damage caused by CPX. The SOS response induced by AZT in the tested E. coli strains does not seem to either contribute to the lethality of the drug or to be involved in protecting bacteria from the damage caused by AZT. In fact, the percentage of killing was the same for both pre-treated and non pre-treated bacteria (p = 0.5). On the contrary, it was found that in Salmonella typhimurium belonging to blood of a patient with recurrent bacteriaemia, the CPX added to pre-treated bacteria with AZT was less lethal than when it was added to non pre-treated bacteria. The SOS response, in this case, protects bacteria from the damage caused by AZT

    Rapid detection of mycobacteria by combining a radiometric detection system with DNA probes.

    No full text
    Forty-four Mycobacterium-spp. were isolated in 33 patients from an infectious diseases ward. All patients were HIV-positive and most of them were drug-abusers. M. avium-intracellulare was the most common type of MOTT (Mycobacteria other than tuberculosis) detected and the only microorganism isolated in patients with mycobacteriaemia. The radiometric method performed by the Bactec system enhanced the isolation rate of mycobacteria, especially from the bloodstream. The Gen-probe DNA hybridization system proved to be rapid diagnostic tool for the identification of strains

    Infections due to Rhodococcus equi in three HIV-infected patients: microbiological findings and antibiotic susceptibility.

    No full text
    Infections of Rhodococcus equi, a well-known pathogen in animals which causes cavitated pneumonia similar to that caused by mycobacteria, were studied in three HIV-infected patients. This microorganism was isolated in the bronchoalveolar washings of two patients and in the sputum of the third. In two patients, Rh. equi represented the first clinical opportunistic manifestation of HIV disease. One patient died of concomitant Pneumocystis infection. The eradication of the microorganism occurred in two out of three patients. It was found that no isolates were resistant to erythromycin, claritromycin, rifampin, vancomycin, teicoplanin, imipenem, gentamycin or azithromycin (MIC values < or = 0.1 microgram/ml). Moreover, the quinolones (ciprofloxacin and ofloxacin) were found to be less effective, whereas neither the beta-lactam antibiotics nor chloramphenicol were effective therapy for this microrganism. At least two antimicrobial agents should be given contemporaneously to treat these infections for a period of up to several months. Our results suggest that the combinations erythromycin + rifampin or imipenem + teicoplanin are the most effective treatments in Rh. equi infections

    ANTIMICROBIAL ACTIVITY OF FLUOROQUINOLONES AND OTHER ANTIBIOTICS ON 1116 CLINICAL GRAM-POSITIVE AND GRAM-NEGATIVE ISOLATES.

    No full text
    A total of 1,116 clinically isolated strains belonging to Staphylococcus aureus (200), Staphylococcus epidermidis (200), Streptococcus pneumoniae (20), Escherichia coil (200), Klebsiella spp. (177), Serratia marcescens (22), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (224), Haemophilus influenzae (35) and Salmonella (38) from the Department of Infectious Diseases, La Sapienza University in Rome (Italy) were tested against three fluoroquinolones (ofloxacin, ciprofloxacin and levofloxacin) and 10 other antibiotics (augmentin, ampicillin, cefaclor, cefixime, cefotaxime, cotrimoxazole, gentamicin, minocycline, oxacillin and vancomycin). Fluoroquinolones inhibited essentially about 100% of H. influenzae, Salmonella and S. pneumoniae, more than 75% of Staphylococcus including methicillin-resistant strains, and about 90% of Enterobacteriaceae and 50% of P. aeruginosa. Minimal inhibitory concentration values ranged from 32 mu g/ml for Klebsiella, S. aureus and epidermidis, E. coil and P. aeruginosa; from <0.015 to 2 mu g/ml for Salmonella; from 0.03 to 16 mu g/ml for Serratia; from <0.015 to 1 mu g/ml for Haemophilus; and from 0.5 to 2 mu g/ml for S. pneumoniae. Levofloxacin and to a lesser extent ofloxacin and ciprofloxacin, generally exhibited a greater activity than the other agents against bath Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. Regarding the distribution of resistant strains in Italy, we found a peculiar pattern of resistance as far as E. coil and P. aeruginosa were concerned. Quality control parameters are also summarized. S. epidermidis resulted as a new emergent pathogen especially in immunocompromised patients and its level of sensitivity has been modified over the last few years. In fact, the percentage of resistant strains to antibiotics or the percentage of methicillin-resistant isolates (in our study 35%), has gradually increased. Levofloxacin and ofloxacin showed good activity against staphylococcal strains compared with the majority of other antibiotics. These results suggest that the newer quinolones are promising antimicrobial agents for various infections
    corecore