The authors studied 138 patients, 57 of whom were younger than 65 years of age and 81 who were 65 years of age and older, with community-acquired pneumonia to determine whether or not such pneumonia is different in the elderly and to define how such patients are investigated and treated. Pneumonia in the elderly was characterized by a higher mortality, 30 v 10%; more likely to be of unknown etiology, 54 v 30%; and more likely to show radiographic progression after the patient had been admitted to the hospital, 48 v 11%. In addition, elderly patients were more likely to be afebrile when admitted, 57 v 26%. Twenty-seven etiologic categories were present in 77 patients in whom a cause for the pneumonia was established. Streptococcus pneumoniae accounted for 9.4% of the pneumonia overall and for 27% of the pneumonia among patients who had sputum cultures performed before antibiotic therapy. The diagnostic yield was 11.6% for blood cultures, 38.2% for sputum cultures, 2.3% for throat washing, and 22.1% for serological studies. Twenty-seven percent of patients were receiving antibiotics of the time of admission to the hospital. Most (79%) received more than one antibiotic after admission. This study indicates that community-acquired pneumonia is a serious illness and that an algorithm approach to diagnosis and treatment of such pneumonia is necessary.
Escherichia coli isolated from cases of bacteremia and from a variety of urinary tract infections were characterized according to serotype (O:H antigenicity), K type (possession of Ki, K2, K3, K12, or K13), hemagglutination (HA) type, and production of beta-hemolysin. Results obtained with the bacteremia and urinary tract infection isolates were similar except for more hemolytic isolates from urine than from blood (42 versus 29%) and more K1+ isolates from blood than from urine (50 versus 29%). A close correlation was found between HA type VI (production of fimbriae which mediate mannose-resistant HA of human and African green monkey erythrocytes) and the production of hemolysin or KI capsular antigen or both. Most (95 of 98, or 95%) of the HA type VI' blood isolates and most (146 of 164, or 89%) of the HA type VI' urine isolates produced hemolysin or Ki or both, in contrast to 22 and 26%, respectively, of those belonging to HA types other than HA type VI. Also, 76% of ail hemolytic and 70% of all K1+ isolates belonged to HA type VI. Remarkably few of the HA type VI' isolates (13%) and even fewer of the HA type VIisolates (3%) produced both Ki and hemolysin; these belonged mainly to serotypes 016:H6, 018:H7, and 02:H4. Other major serogroups were usually Kl+/hemolysin-(01, 07) or Kl-/hemoly-sin+ (02, 04, 06). At least 74% (262 of 351) and possibly as many as 83% (293 of 351) of those isolates which produced mannose-resistant HA of human erythrocytes were classified as HA type VI'; 31 isolates produced mannose-resistant HA with all erythrocytes tested. Taking serogroup and serotype into consideration, we conclude that the E. coli fimbrial hemagglutinin(s) responsible for the HA type VI phenotype wiil prove to be the same as the virulence-associated mannoseresistant adhesins of uropathogenic E. coli which other investigators have characterized as unique fimbrial antigens detectable by mannose-resistant HA of human erythrocytes.
The activity of moxalactam, cefoxitin, cephalothin, cefamandole, chloramphenicol, clindamycin, metronidazole, and ticarcillin was determined against 344 isolates of anaerobic bacteria. The activity of penicillin G was determined as well for 234 isolates not of the Bacteroides fragilis group. Moxalactam was more active than cephalothin and cefamandole and slightly less active than cefoxitin. Metronidazole was the most active antimicrobial agent against the B. fragilis group, whereas chloramphenicol was most active overall. Clostridium species were the most resistant group of organisms tested. Relatively high concentrations of penicillin were required to inhibit the C. perfringens strains: 80% at 0.5 U/ml and 100% at 16 U/ml. Our study demonstrates the need for periodic anaerobe susceptibility testing in order to better guide empiric antibiotic therapy.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.