The aim of this study was to determine the susceptibility patterns of 100 group B streptococcal strains isolated in our hospital and to ascertain tolerance to penicillin by determining quantitative killing curves. We found two strains with intermediate susceptibility to penicillin and eight strains to ampicillin. Seventeen isolates were tolerant to penicillin, with bacterial counts decreasing 2 to 3 log during the first 8 h but still above 10(2) CFU/ml after 24 h. The kinetic study shows that penicillin tolerance is not rare among group B streptococci isolated in our hospital.
With the object of analyzing current characteristics of infectious endocarditis (IE) in children, we carried out a retrospective study of 23 cases of IE in children under 15 years of age seen at the Hospital Ramón y Cajal in Madrid (Spain) between 1977 and 1985. The incidence was high (1.3 cases per 1000 children admitted). The male/female ratio was 2:1. Eight patients were under 2 years of age and 15 over 2 years, the majority being adolescents. The two groups presented marked etiological and prognostic differences. Congenital heart disease was the predisposing factor in 20 of the 23 cases. Streptococcus viridans (nine cases) and Staphylococcus aureus (eight cases) were the most frequent organisms. Fourteen cases were on a native valve and nine were secondary (seven of these on prosthetic patches). In spite of advances in therapy, IE continues to be a severe illness: the mortality rate in our series was 26%. Factors associated with a poor prognosis were: age less than 2 years, Staphylococcus aureus as the causative agent, and the presence of prosthetic material.
Cases of bacteremia caused by anaerobic microorganisms and occurring during a four year period in a non-selected patient group in a Spanish general hospital were analysed retrospectively. Microbiological data was collected on 212 patients and clinical data on 103 patients. Cases of anaerobic bacteremia represented 8.6% of the total number of cases of bacteremia. Of the 232 anaerobic microorganisms causing bacteremia, gram-negative bacilli were responsible in 113 cases (48.7%), gram-positive bacilli in 92 cases (39.6%), gram-positive cocci in 25 cases (10.7%), and Veillonella spp. in two cases (0.8%). The most important clinical features were fever (64%), anemia (56%), septic shock (22%) and metastatic abscesses (21%). Patients with anaerobic bacteremia were hospitalized for an average of 51.7 days. The overall mortality was 32% and factors associated with poor prognosis were severe underlying disease, nosocomial acquisition, presence of shock, presence of metastatic foci of infection, and absence of adequate surgical drainage. The mortality rate of patients who received adequate antimicrobial therapy was 30% and that of patients who received inadequate treatment or none was 29%. It is concluded that anaerobic bacteremia has a significant rate of morbidity and mortality and that underlying disease and surgical debridement and/or drainage have greater prognostic significance than the use of antimicrobial agents.
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