The incidence of invasive fungal infections after bone marrow transplantation (BMT) was analyzed in 303 consecutive marrow graft recipients (allogeneic n = 271, autologous n = 27, syngeneic n = 5). All patients received inhalations with amphotericin B (10 mg twice daily) during neutropenia. The overall incidence of invasive fungal infections within the first 120 days after transplant was 3.6% (11/303; aspergillosis: 6; yeast infection: 5). Four of the 11 cases occurred early, and seven cases were observed after neutrophil recovery and discontinuation of amphotericin B inhalation treatment. Late infection was significantly associated with the development of acute graft-versus-host disease. Four of the 11 infections (early 2/4; late: 2/7) were observed in patients with a history of previous fungal infection. Other patient and treatment characteristics were not helpful in defining potential risk factors. In particular, the incidence of invasive fungal infections did not differ between patients with more or less strict reverse isolation measures. Occasional side effects such as initial mild cough and bad taste were rare, usually disappeared during continued administration, and were in no case the reason for discontinuation of treatment. These data suggest that aerosolized amphotericin B may be a useful, convenient, and efficient prophylactic antifungal regimen in BMT.
The lumbar sympathetic chain was electrically stimulated in different species before and after blocking the adrenergic vasoconstrictor nervous response. Blood flow in the hind limb skeletal muscles was measured. In all species studied, fox, sheep, goat, monkey (five different strains), polecat, rat, badger, opossum rat and hare, stimulation of the lumbar chain before adrenergic blockade resulted in a vasoconstriction. After blocking the vasoconstrictor nervous response stimulation elicited a blood flow increase in fox, sheep and goat. After atropine, the response to stimulation was blocked, indicating that sympathetic cholinergic nerves had been activated. In the other species studied no vasodilator response was observed upon sympathetic chain stimulation. The results suggest that the role attributed to the vasodilator nerves, anticipatory to muscle exercise, are played by other mechanisms in species lacking sympathetic cholinergic vasodilator nerves.
The purpose of this study was to determine if patients with high vancomycin (VAN) serum levels experience more toxicity than underdosed patients with lower (VAN) levels, and whether low VAN serum levels cause therapeutic failures in patients with gram-positive bacteremia. In 198 cancer patients trough and peak serum levels of VAN were measured. Acute toxicity (Red Man syndrome) appeared in 3 patients (1.5%). Patients previously or currently treated with other nephrotoxic compounds (134 patients) presented the same incidence of nephrotoxicity as those receiving VAN for the first time in monotherapy (64 patients). VAN did not increase the toxicity when patients were dosed simultaneously or previously with aminoglycosides or amphotericin B. Our second observation, when studying serum levels in our 198 patients was that high VAN trough serum levels (trough > 15 microg/mL) were associated with significantly more nephrotoxicity (33.3% vs. 11.1%, P < 0.03) than low levels in the subgroups of either pretreated patients or unpretreated with other nephrotoxic drugs. None of 198 patients who had trough levels below 15 microg/mL had peak levels exceeding 40 microg/mL. This suggests that only serum monitoring of trough levels may predict nephrotoxicity. A case control study was conducted to compare a group of 22 VAN failures with 22 successfully treated patients matched in underlying disease and neutropenia who were treated in the same period, under the same antibiotic policy, at the same cancer center, for gram-positive bacteremia. Persisting, enterococcal, or mixed enterococcal plus staphylococcal bacteremia were the only statistically significant risk factors which predicted therapy failure in cancer patients. Neither peak nor trough VAN serum levels predicted failure or cure of gram-positive bacteremia in cancer patients.
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