71 research outputs found
Susceptibility of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus Clinical Isolates to Various Antimicrobial Agents. IL Isolation of Arbekacin-resistant Strain.
Resistance patterns against 24 antimicrobial agents were examined for 50 strains of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) isolated at Hiroshima University Hospital during the period October 1990 and July 1991. Overall resistance (the percentage of highly and moderately resistant strains) to the antimicrobial agents is summarized as follows: methicillin 100%, flomoxef 100% (β-lactams); kanamycin 94%, tobramycin 94%, amikacin 100%, isepamicin 94%, gentamicin 80%, dibekacin 94%, arbekacin 2% (basic oligosaccharide group/aminocyclitols); ofloxacin 96%, temafloxacin 96%, levofloxacin 96% (fluoroquinolones); erythromycin 98%, clarithromycin 98%, josamycin 30% (macrolides); vancomycin 0% (glycopeptide); tetracycline 94%, minocycline 94% (tetracyclines); fosfomycin 100%; mikamycin B 30%, nosiheptide 0% (peptide); rifampicin 2% (ansamycin); streptomycin 2% (basic oligosaccharide group); chloramphenicol 2%.
Arbekacin resistance was observed in one case: the cross resistance was complete among the aminocyclitol antibiotics tested in this study and streptomycin, probably due to the ribosomal alteration
Clinical Characteristics and Outcomes in 314 Japanese Patients with Bacterial Endophthalmitis : A Multicenter Cohort Study from J-CREST
Bacterial endophthalmitis is an intraocular infection that causes rapid vison loss. Pathogens can infect the intraocular space directly (exogenous endophthalmitis (ExE)) or indirectly (endogenous endophthalmitis (EnE)). To identify predictive factors for the visual prognosis of Japanese patients with bacterial endophthalmitis, we retrospectively examined the bacterial endophthalmitis characteristics of 314 Japanese patients and performed statistics using these clinical data. Older patients, with significantly more severe clinical symptoms, were prevalent in the ExE group compared with the EnE group. However, the final best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) was not significantly different between the ExE and EnE groups. Bacteria isolated from patients were not associated with age, sex, or presence of eye symptoms. Genus Streptococcus, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Enterococcus were more prevalent in ExE patients than EnE patients and contributed to poor final BCVA. The presence of eye pain, bacterial identification, and poor BCVA at baseline were risk factors for final visual impairment
Susceptibility of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus Clinical Isolates to Various Antimicrobial Agents. IV. Aminoglycoside-modifying Enzyme AAC(6')/APH(2") is Responsible for Arbekacin-resistance Enhanced by Bleomycin
Resistance patterns against various antimicrobial agents including β-lactams, aminoglycosides, tetracyclines, fluoroquinolones, macrolides were examined for 58 strains of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) isolated at Hiroshima University Hospital from April to November 1992. All the MRSA strains produced type II-coagulase but notβ-lactamase.  
Regarding aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes, 7 strains (12%) appeared to be producing aminoglycoside 4',4"-adenyltransferase AAD(4',4") encoded by aadD without coproduction of bifunctional aminoglycoside 6' -acetyltransferase/2" -phosphotransferase AAC(6')/APH(2") encoded by aacA-aphD (referred to as tobramycin-resistant type, TOBr). The remaining 51 strains (88%) were phenotypically producers of both enzymes (i.e., mix-resistant type, Mixr). AAD(4',4"), encoded by aadD which was reported to be closely linked with bleomycin (BLM)-resistance determinant, could be seen in 100% MRSA strains and ca. 90% strains expressed AAC(6')/APH(2"). BLM endowed Mixr-type but not TOBr-type MRSA strain with enhanced resistance to arbekacin (ABK) dose-dependently, presumably by modifying the production of AAC(6')/APH(2"). The manifestation of ABK-resistant phenotype by Mixr-type MRSA required the coexistence of BLM. Therefore, ABK must be administered carefully to cure MRSA infection in patients who have been treated with BLM
Susceptibility of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus Clinical Isolates to Various Antimicrobial Agents
Resistance patterns against 23 antimicrobial agents were examined for 42 strains of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Thirty-four strains were isolated at Hiroshima University Hospital during 1984-1990 and 8 strains were collected in Tokushima city in 1986. Overall resistance to the antimicrobial agents in clinical use is summarized as follows: methicillin 100%, flomoxef 93% (β-lactams); kanamycin 98%, tobramycin 88%, amikacin 83%, isepamicin 81 %, gentamicin 60%, dibekacin 64%, arbekacin 0% (aminocyclitol aminoglycosides); ofloxacin 31 %, TA-167 33% (fluoroquinolones); erythromycin 100%, clarithromycin 100%, josamycin 71 % (macrolides); vancomycin 0% (glycopeptide); tetracycline 43%, minocycline 31 % (tetracyclines); fosfomycin 93%. The MRSA strains remained susceptible to the non-clinical peptide group of antibiotics except for mikamycin B: mikamycin A 2%, mikamycin B 69%, nosiheptide 0%, bottromycin A2 0%, bottromycin D-1 0%, bottromycin D-2 0%.  
Since April 1990, the MRSA strains isolated at Hiroshima University Hospital showed a tendency to acquire resistance to tetracyclines and fluoroquinolones and to lose mikamycin B-resistance.  
As of August 1990, none of the MRSA strains isolated at Hiroshima University Hospital was resistant to vancomycin and arbekacin
Intracellular Cytokine Patterns of Peripheral Blood T Cells as a Useful Indicator of Activeness of Crohn's Disease
Recently, the alteration of peripheral T cells has become a focus of attention in research on Crohn's disease (CD). To examine the characteristics of peripheral T cells in CD patients, we analyzed the expression of a memory T cell marker (CD45RO^CD3+) and the cytokine production by peripheral helper and cytotoxic T cells in patients with CD. With the use of monensin to prevent the secretion of cytokines under stimulation, we measured the count of intracellular cytokine-positive cells for production of interferon (IFN)-γ, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, interleukin (IL)-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, and granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) in the peripheral T cell population using flow-cytometry. The counts of lymphocytes, T cells, and helper T cells in patients with CD were significantly lower than in normal volunteers. Although no difference in the counts of lymphocytes, total T cells, helper and cytotoxic T cells was observed, the counts of intracellular cytokine producing helper T cells in IFN-γ, TNF-α or GM-CSF were significantly higher in active cases than in quiescent cases. These results suggest that stable CD patients are immunosuppressive, and activation of some kinds of T-cells, especially Thl-associated cytokine producing T-cells, correlate with disease progression. Thl-associated cytokine analysis of peripheral T cells may be one of the useful markers to evaluate the activeness of Crohn's disease
Susceptibility of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus Clinical Isolates to Various Antimicrobial Agents. III. Novel, Inducible Resistance to Macrolide-lincosamides-treptogramin B (MLS) Antibiotics.
Resistance patterns against 25 antimicrobial agents consisting of β-lactams, aminoglycosides, tetracyclines, fluoroquinolones, macrolides and etc. were examined for 69 strains of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) isolated at Hiroshima University Hospital from July 1991 to April 1992. Regarding overall resistance (the percentage of highly and moderately resistant strains), the following antimicrobial agents were no more effective chemotherapeutics for MRSA infections (%resistance): methicillin (100), flomoxef (100), kanamycin (100), tobramycin (100), amikacin (100), isepamicin (100), gentamicin (78), dibekacin (100), ofloxacin (99), levofloxacin (99), temafloxacin (99), erythromycin (100), clarithromycin (100), tetracycline (93), minocycline (93) and fosfomycin (100). Further spread of arbekacin-resistant strain, which was isolated in April 1991, into a clinical environment could not be recognized during the period covered in the present study.  
All the MRSA strains were resistant either constitutively (26 strains) or inducibly (43 strains) to macrolide-lincosamide-streptogramin B (MLS) antibiotics. When expression is constitutive, the strains are resistant to all MLS antibiotics. In contrast, 16-membered macrolide (i.e., jasamycin), lincomycin and mikamycin B escape resistance in the strains with a typical inducible resistance overcome in the presence of 14-membered macrolides by a translational attenuation mechanism. Three of 4β-lactamase-positive strains, however, can not be classified in these two resistance groups, being exclusively resistant to mikamycin B. The strains grown in the presence of any inducing MLS antibiotic became susceptible to mikamycin B even in the inducer-free culture
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