Thirteen cases of meningeal and/or ventricular infection and 1 case of septicaemia, all caused by staphylococci, were treated with continuous intravenous infusions of vancomycin. Repeated measurements of vancomycin plasma and CSF levels by microbiological assay or by high performance liquid chromatography showed that the antibiotic entered the CSF after 48 hours of treatment and that its concentrations in CSF remained stable at 1 to 4 micrograms/ml (mean: 2 micrograms/ml) throughout the 3 weeks' treatment period. After treatment was discontinued, vancomycin became undetectable in CSF within less than 24 hours.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Med Interne (Paris)
March 1983
The high incidence of staphylococcal infection in severe forms of orbital cellulitis is reviewed with 4 case reports of children with complications of acute sinusitis due to staphylococcal infection. Three cases of thrombosis of the sinus cavernosus due to ethmoidal extension were observed, complicated in one case by fatal purulent meningitis. In one case, the sinusitis was a mixed staphylococcal and anerobic infection with orbital cellulitis and subcutaneous gas gangrene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn 14 chronic hemodialysis patients with recent circulatory pulmonary congestion or pulmonary edema, left ventricular failure was suspected. Left ventricular function was studied by a sitting exercise test and a dextran infusion test. According to the left ventricular function curves the left ventricular function was not altered in chronic hemodialysis patients compared to normal subjects.
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