scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
JournalISSN: 1523-3847

Current Infectious Disease Reports 

Springer Science+Business Media
About: Current Infectious Disease Reports is an academic journal published by Springer Science+Business Media. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Population & Pneumonia. It has an ISSN identifier of 1523-3847. Over the lifetime, 1479 publications have been published receiving 31715 citations. The journal is also known as: Curr. infect. dis. rep.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Patients with infected prosthetic joints generally require multiple additional operations and prolonged periods of antibiotic therapy, requiring further cycles of treatment with progressively deteriorating function.
Abstract: Total joint replacement has been one of the most remarkable successes of modern medical technology. Once John Charnley had solved the problems of implant design, choice of materials, implant fixation, and infection (initial rates of infection were approximately 10%), the way was clear for the widespread use of this valuable treatment, which is highly effective at removing pain and restoring function. Unfortunately, infection still remains an important, though less common, problem. It is associated with serious morbidity (pain, loss of function, wound breakdown, wound discharge, implant failure) and sometimes mortality. It may be impossible to eradicate or suppress infection in the long term without removal of the prosthesis, and most clinicians would consider it unwise to re-implant a new prosthesis in the presence of infection. Hence, patients with infected prosthetic joints generally require multiple additional operations and prolonged periods of antibiotic therapy. Even radical attempts at cure may fail (in 10% to 15% of cases in most series), requiring further cycles of treatment with progressively deteriorating function. Thus, the treatment of prosthetic joint infection is arduous for the patient and the health care team, with no guarantee of success.

349 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The globalization of CHIKV exposes countries with Aedes mosquitoes both to brutal outbreaks of acute incapacitating episodes and endemic long-lasting disorders.
Abstract: Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is an alphavirus transmitted by mosquitoes, mostly Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. After half a century of focal outbreaks of acute febrile polyarthralgia in Africa and Asia, the disease unexpectedly spread in the past decade with large outbreaks in Africa and around the Indian Ocean and rare autochthonous transmission in temperate areas. This emergence brought new insights on its pathogenesis, notably the role of the A226V mutation that improved CHIKV fitness in Ae. albopictus and the possible CHIKV persistence in deep tissue sanctuaries for months after infection. Massive outbreaks also revealed new aspects of the acute stage: the high number of symptomatic cases, unexpected complications, mother-to-child transmission, and low lethality in debilitated patients. The follow-up of patients in epidemic areas has identified frequent, long-lasting, rheumatic disorders, including rare inflammatory joint destruction, and common chronic mood changes associated with quality-of-life impairment. Thus, the globalization of CHIKV exposes countries with Aedes mosquitoes both to brutal outbreaks of acute incapacitating episodes and endemic long-lasting disorders.

308 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In skeletal muscle biopsies taken from patients with sepsis, a relationship between increased nitric oxide production, antioxidant depletion, reduced respiratory chain complex I activity, and low ATP levels is demonstrated, which support the notion that mitochondrial dysfunction resulting in bioenergetic failure may be an important factor in the pathophysiology of sepsi-associated multiorgan failure.
Abstract: Sepsis is an increasingly common problem, particularly among critically ill patients. Mechanisms by which sepsis induces organ dysfunction have not been elucidated. The coexisting findings (unique to sepsis) of metabolic acidosis yet increased tissue oxygen tensions suggest cellular availability but decreased use of oxygen (tissue dysoxia). Because mitochondria use more than 90% of total body oxygen consumption for adenosine triphosphate (ATP) generation, a bioenergetic abnormality is implied. Cell and animal data have shown that nitric oxide (and its metabolites), produced in considerable excess in patients with sepsis, can affect oxidative phosphorylation by inhibiting several of its component respiratory enzymes. Human data are scarce. However, in skeletal muscle biopsies taken from patients with sepsis, we have recently demonstrated a relationship between increased nitric oxide production, antioxidant depletion, reduced respiratory chain complex I activity, and low ATP levels. These findings correlated with severity of disease and outcome and support the notion that mitochondrial dysfunction resulting in bioenergetic failure may be an important factor in the pathophysiology of sepsis-associated multiorgan failure. However, a reasonable argument can be made that the reduction in energy supply could represent a last-ditch adaptive response to ongoing inflammation, resulting in a cellular shutdown analogous to hibernation that allows eventual restoration of organ function and long-term survival in patients fit enough to survive the acute phase.

220 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202315
202223
202124
202034
201954
201849