1,720,989 research outputs found
Why Is Antibiotic Treatment Rarely Performed in COVID-19-Positive Children Admitted in Pediatric Intensive Care Units?
Interactions between lateral wall elongation and septum formation during cell cycle in Klebsiella pneumoniae
In this study, we evaluated the effect of three different beta-lactams on peptidoglycan synthesis and cell division of synchronously growing rods of the pH conditional morphology mutant MirM7 and its parental strain MirA12. We have found that mecillinam, when added at varying times to synchronous MirM7 rods during the first 30 min of the cell cycle, inhibits peptidoglycan synthesis but has no effect when added afterwards while cells form septa and divide. Addition to the above cells of piperacillin for 30 min from the very beginning of the cell cycle did not cause any delay in cell division. On the contrary, when this antibiotic was added to synchronous cells for 15 min, starting 35 min after the beginning of the cell cycle, cell division occurred with an approximate 15-min delay. Addition of cefaloridine to synchronous cells at varying times during the cell cycle invariably caused a delay in cell division equal to the time during which the antibiotic was maintained in the culture. These findings are interpreted as supporting a previous hypothesis for shape regulation in bacterial rods and are discussed in terms of the interaction between lateral wall elongation and septum formation during the cell cycle
What if COVID-19 affects the child: which weapons and how to use them
: Since the reports in Wuhan (China), in December 2019, of the first cluster of cases of pneumonia caused by the new Coronavirus called 2019-nCoV or SARS-CoV-2, there has been a pandemic spread of the infection. By now, we have no specific therapy to counteract this emergency. The latest epidemiological data suggest that children are just as likely as adults to get infected by the virus. Most of them show mild clinical pictures or are completely asymptomatic, but there is an increased risk for severe disease in infancy (<12 months of age) and in children with underlying medical conditions. In this article, research achievements on the treatment of pediatric SARS-CoV-2 infection are examined
Shifting of the penicillin binding proteins that are the target for inhibition by beta-lactams as a likely mechanism of resistance to antibiotics during therapy
The penicillin binding proteins (PBPs) that in Streptococcus faecium are the targets for inhibitory activity of beta-lactam antibiotics were analyzed both in cells growing at their fastest and at reduced rates. It was found that while under the former conditions the PBPs showed the highest affinity for penicillin, under the latter the target is shifted to PBP (PBP5) that has a very low affinity for penicillin and other beta-lactams. The possibility that conditions met by Enterococci in human infections cause a shifting of the penicillin target and the possible role of such shifting in resistance to beta-lactams during therapy are discussed
COVID-19 and developmental origins of health and disease
From the moment of the identification of SARS-CoV-2 as an etiological agent of the severe clinical pictures of pneumonia that were being slowly observed all over the world, numerous studies have been conducted to increase the knowledge about what was an unknown virus until then. The efforts were mainly aimed to acquire epidemiological, microbiological, pathogenetic, clinical, diagnostic, therapeutic and preventive information in order to increase the available weapons to fight an infection which was rapidly taking on the characteristics of the pandemic. Given the topicality of the problem, not everything has yet been fully understood and clarified, especially in the maternal-fetal‐neonatal field, where we are beginning to question what could be the outcomes of newborn babies born to mothers who contracted SARS-CoV-2 infection during pregnancy. Thus, the aim of this review is to analyze the long-term outcomes of this infection that could affect the offspring, regardless of a possible maternal-fetal transmission, focusing on, above all, the role of maternal immune activation and the expression of the Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) in particular at the placental level
Covid-19 and comorbidities: Is inflammation the underlying condition in children? A narrative review
This paper examines the potential link between COVID-19 and the presence of comorbidities and assesses the role of inflammation in this correlation. In COVID-19 patients, the most frequently associated diseases share a pathogenic inflammatory basis and apparently act as a risk factor in the onset of a more severe form of the disease, particularly in adulthood. However, in children, the understanding of the underlying pathogenic mechanisms is often complicated by the milder symptoms presented. A series of theories have, therefore, been put forward with a view of providing a better understanding of the role played by inflammation in this dramatic setting. All evidence available to date on this topic is discussed in this review
Thiamine as a possible neuroprotective strategy in neonatal hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy
On the basis that similar biochemical and histological sequences of events occur in the brain during thiamine deficiency and hypoxia/ischemia related brain damage, we have planned this review to discuss the possible therapeutic role of thiamine and its derivatives in the management of neonatal hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE). Among the many benefits, thiamine per se as antioxidant, given intravenously (IV) at high doses, defined as dosage greater than 100 mg IV daily, should counteract the damaging effects of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species in the brain, including the reaction of peroxynitrite with the tyrosine residues of the major enzymes involved in intracellular glucose metabolism, which plays a key pathophysiological role in HIE in neonates. Accordingly, it is conceivable that, in neonatal HIE, the blockade of intracellular progressive oxidative stress and the rescue of mitochondrial function mediated by thiamine and its derivatives can lead to a definite neuroprotective effect. Because therapeutic hypothermia and thiamine may both act on the latent period of HIE damage, a synergistic effect of these therapeutic strategies is likely. Thiamine treatment may be especially important in mild HIE and in areas of the world where there is limited access to expensive hypothermia equipment
Relationship between pregnancy and coronavirus: what we know
The identification in China in December 2019 of a new coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) immediately rekindled the spotlight on a problem also addressed in the past during the epidemics of SARS in 2002–2003 and MERS in 2012: the implications of a possible infection during pregnancy, both for pregnant women and for fetuses and infants. Pregnancy is characterized by some changes involving both the immune system and the pulmonary physiology, exposing the pregnant woman to a greater susceptibility to viral infections and more serious complications. The objective of this review is therefore to analyze the relationship between pregnancy and known coronaviruses, with particular reference to SARS-CoV-2
A review of current knowledge on pollution, cigarette smoking and covid-19 diffusion and their relationship with inflammation
Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is an infectious disease caused by the newly discovered corona-virus, Sars-Cov-2. This infection can cause mild to very severe respiratory and systemic illness mainly related with a cytokine storm. The epidemiology of COVID-19 is under continuous evolution, and studies are ongoing aiming at identifying the possible factors facilitating the diffusion of this infection. (www.actabiomedica.it)
- …
