Topic
Penicillin
About: Penicillin is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 17916 publications have been published within this topic receiving 368480 citations. The topic is also known as: penicillin antibiotic & PCN.
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TL;DR: Improved referral to an allergist will help to identify patients who have penicillin allergy requiring avoidance and to identify trends in clinical evaluation and management from a tertiary center serving a large inner-city population.
Abstract: Penicillin allergy remains the most common drug allergy, with a reported prevalence of 10% in the United States. Epidemiology of penicillin allergy in outpatient populations is relatively scarce. This study sought to determine the prevalence and characteristics of reported penicillin allergy in an urban outpatient population and to identify trends in clinical evaluation and management from a tertiary center serving a large inner-city population. A retrospective review of electronic medical records was performed of adult patients seen in the Internal Medicine Associates Clinic of Mount Sinai Hospital between January 31, 2012, and July 31, 2012. Medical records were selected based on the documentation of penicillin in patient's allergy section. Of the 11,761 patients seen in the clinic, 1348 patients (11.5%) reported a history of penicillin allergy. The most common allergic reactions were rash (37%), unknown/undocumented (20.2%), hives (18.9%), swelling/angioedema (11.8%), and anaphylaxis (6.8%). There was an increased prevalence of penicillin allergy in female patients compared with male patients (odds ratio [OR] = 1.82; 95% CI = 1.60, 2.08; p < 0.0001), and there were significantly fewer Asians with penicillin allergy compared with Caucasians (OR = 0.51; 95% CI = 0.32, 0.83; p = 0.007). However, only 78 (6%) of the patients reporting penicillin allergy had a referral to an allergy specialist. Overall, improved referral to an allergist will help to identify patients who have penicillin allergy requiring avoidance.
117 citations
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TL;DR: A preliminary notice of the principal findings secured up to the end of 1944 in a collaborative effort of a large number of investigators, unnamed at present.
Abstract: THIS brief summary of results obtained by British and American chemists, issued under the joint auspices of the Committee on Medical Research (Office of Scientific Research and Development, Washington) and the Medical Research Council (London), is a preliminary notice of the principal findings secured up to the end of 1944 in a collaborative effort of a large number of investigators, unnamed at present. It implies some corrections of published data; authors of early publications are among those who have cleared up these points. For the sake of clearness, the account is not given in chronological order of development. The primary object of this communication is to disclose significant facts which have been confirmed by unequivocal synthesis and to record a few essential points which are still matter for conjecture. Full details will be disclosed at a later stage, together with an account of experiments not referred to in this report.
117 citations
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TL;DR: Rates of antimicrobial resistance have been increasing in bacteria responsible for community-acquired lower respiratory tract infections in the United States, and nearly 100% of clinical isolates of Moraxella catarrhalis now produce beta-lactamase, an enzyme that renders this pathogen resistant to such agents as penicillin, ampicillin, and amoxicillin.
117 citations
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TL;DR: It is concluded that penicillin given at birth to neonates weighing 2000 g or less does not prevent early-onset streptococcal disease or reduce excess mortality associated with disease.
Abstract: We studied the effect of penicillin on early-onset Group B streptococcal disease over a 52-month period in neonates who were at high risk of infection. Shortly after birth, 1187 neonates weighing 2000 g or less had blood samples taken for cultures and were randomized into an early-treatment group (given intramuscular penicillin G within 60 minutes of birth) or a control group. The incidence of early-onset disease was 20 per 1000 live births (24 of 1187); the number of infants in the early-treatment group who had disease (10 of 589) was similar to that in the control group (14 of 598). The fatality rates were similar in both groups (6 of 10 vs. 8 of 14). Cultures from blood obtained within one hour of birth were positive in 21 of the 24 infants with disease; 22 of the 24 were symptomatic within four hours of birth. Thus, infection was well established before the first hour of postnatal life. At autopsy, gram-positive cocci were seen in lung sections of four infants in whom cultures of blood obtain...
117 citations
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TL;DR: FL-1060, in contrast to other penicillins, does not inhibit murein transpeptid enzyme, D-alanine carboxypeptidase I, or mureIn endopeptidases.
117 citations