Pu
•biom
e
Human•Topics
Carbohydrate digestion
Overview
Amylose & amylopectin
Undigestible carbs
Foods with fibre
Protein digestion
Fat digestion
Human Milk Oligosaccharides
Overview
HMO Structural Guide
Di- & Trisaccharides
Tetraose & Tetrasaccharides
Pentaose
Hexaose
Octaose
Decaose
Miscellaneous
MUC2 Oligosaccharides
Antibiotics vs Good Bacteria
Human / Bacteria Digestion
Carbohydrates
Monosaccharides
Polyols
Di- & tri-saccharides
Polysaccharides
Miscellaneous
Organic acids
SMCF Acids
Polyacids
Hydroxy-, Oxo-acids and Miscell.
Aromatic Acids
Amino acids
21 Original
Unconventional
Other
Nitrogen cmpds
Bacteria•Topics
Guide to Tables
General Physiology
Bacteria & Health
Substrate Utilisation
Carbohydrates
Monosaccharides and polyols
Oligo- & polysaccharides
Miscellaneous
Organic acids
SMCF Acids
Polyacids
Miscellaneous
Amino acids
21 Original
Unconventional
Other
Nitrogen cmpds
Antibiotic activity against
Penicillins and Penems
Cephems
Aminoglycosides and Macrolides
Quinolones and Tetracyclines
Glycopeptides and Polyketides
Heterocycles and Miscellaneous
All Antibiotics
Oxidation / Fermentation
Monosaccharides & polyols
Oligo- & Poly-saccharides
Miscellaneous
Biochemical Tests
Metabolites Produced
Bacterial Enzymes
General enzymes
'Carbo'sidases
Esterases
Proteases
Amidases
Hydrolysis / Digestion
Resources
Reference List
Ref List (Alt.)
Create Ref
Search
Login
Submit
Update:
González2006
Title
*
Keywords
Bacteria
Citation
*
Authors
DOI/PMIB
Journal
Year
Volume
Issue
Pages
Notes
<p>Corynebacterium pseudodiphteriticum has been considered a very<br />infrequent respiratory pathogen. We report three cases of pneumonia<br />due to C. pseudodiphteriticum, describing their clinical and microbiological<br />features. There were two patients with pre-existing chronic<br />respiratory disease, one of their with steroidal therapy, and other<br />associated with endotracheal intubation. The diagnostic was made by<br />Gram stain and quantitative cultures from respiratory tract specimens.<br />All patients were cured after treatment with amoxicillin-clavulanate,<br />ceftriaxone and vancomycin respectively. C. pseudodiphteriticum<br />must be consider as a possible causal agent of pneumonia in<br />patients with underlying respiratory disease or endotracheal intubation.<br />Antimicrobial susceptibility testing of C. pseudodiphteriticum<br />may be useful for correct treatment of infected patients, but beta-lactam<br />antibiotics are an appropriate therapeutic option against this<br />bacteria.</p> <p>Strains cultivated had a pattern of susceptibility to antimicrobials common, with in vitro resistance to macrolides and lincosamides and, on two occasions, also to ciprofloxacin, being sensitive to penicillin, cephalosporins and glycopeptides. Possibly in cases 1 and 3, treatment with levofloxacin favored selection in the bronchial tree of C. pseudodiphteriticum resistant to quinolones. In the three reported cases the therapeutic response was good after adjusting the treatment to the antibiogram, using beta-lactams in the cases 1 and 2 and vancomycin in the third.</p> <pre id="tw-target-text" class="tw-data-text tw-text-large tw-ta" dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" data-placeholder="Translation"><span class="Y2IQFc" lang="en">In conclusion, the possibility of infection should be considered respiratory infection by C. pseudodiphteriticum especially in those patients with chronic respiratory disease, some type of immune compromise or have undergone repeated endotracheal intubation. Gram stain of the respiratory samples will initially guide the diagnostic suspicion and treatment, confirming with quantitative cultures and the study of antimicrobial susceptibility of the isolate. In any case, given the sensitivity profile so constant offered by C. pseudodiphteriticum, beta-lactams as 3rd generation cephalosporins and amoxicillin-clavulanate seem to be the most appropriate therapeutic group to treat infections caused by this bacteria.</span></pre>
Submit