campylobacter jejuni
2/10/2008 5:58:41 PM
This was indeed campy - a small motile, nonspore-forming, comma-shaped, gram-negative bacilli.Treatment? How about if he was immunocompromised or if it was severe disease?
2/10/2008 6:02:47 PM
in an otherwise healthy persontreatment is hydration he will get over it on his owncipro or a zpak if its severeif he is immunosuppressed, IV ciprohope he doesnt get Guillain-Barre syndromeits teh suck[Edited on February 10, 2008 at 6:09 PM. Reason : .]
2/10/2008 6:07:49 PM
Actually there is a lot of fluoroquinolone-resistant campy, so erythromycin is the drug of choiceHere's another:An 18-day-old female infant is brought to the pediatric emergency room by her panicked mother. The child has developed a fever and has been crying nonstop for the past 4 hours. She has fed only once today and vomited all of the ingested formula. The baby was born by vaginal delivery after an uncomplicated, full-term pregnancy to a healthy 22-year-old G1P1 woman. The mother has no history of any infectious diseases and tested negative for group B Strep prior to delivery. The immediate postpartum course was routine. The baby had a routine check-up in the pediatrician's office 3 days ago, and no problems were identified. On exam, the child has a temperature of 38.3°C (100.9°F), pulse of 140 beats per minute, and respiratory rate of 32 breaths per minute. She is not crying at the moment. She has poor muscle tone, will not regard your face or respond to loud stimuli. Her anterior fontanelle is bulging. Her mucous membranes are moist, and her skin is without rash. Her heart is tachycardic but regular, and her lungs are clear. Her white blood count is elevated, a urinalysis is normal, and a chest x-ray is clear. A Gram stain of her cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from a lumbar puncture shows gram-positive coccobacilli.Most likely organism?[Edited on February 10, 2008 at 6:19 PM. Reason : ]
2/10/2008 6:16:36 PM
so she has high ICP along with the meningitisim totally guessing here, but apparently this is becoming a more common infant infectionlisteria monocytogenes
2/10/2008 6:32:53 PM
damn, you're goodtreatment?
2/10/2008 6:38:44 PM
well that depends on the sensitivity datai know what we use for listeriosis in my neuro icuwhich is trimethoprim sulfa in d5, because it crosses the blood/brain barrier betterbut from what i was able to find out via good ole google, they are using ampicillin
2/10/2008 6:45:32 PM
^ interesting, yeah all i knew was amp. but they say mainly just dont use cephalosporins, right?
2/10/2008 6:58:04 PM
lawl, so far, brainysmurf has won this thread
2/10/2008 7:02:14 PM
yeahtook care of a guy with listeria ventriculitis (he had an EVD)so he got bactrim in d5 500ml worth of d5 twice a dayhe was already in a pentobarb induced coma because of his high ICPwe would have to give him his bactrim plus mannitol and sometimes 23% hypertonic saline on top of draining CSF to control his icp while he was getting his antibiotics.bactrim is a pain in the ass to give, but ID at duke uses it, AND it did clear up the infection.but yeah, from what i read cephalosporins = bad
2/10/2008 7:05:19 PM