View clinical trials related to Bacterial Infections.
Filter by:This is a Phase 1, open-label study to assess the PK, safety and tolerability of XNW4107, imipenem and cilastatin administered by 60-minute (60-min) IV infusion to adults with various degrees of renal insufficiency as compared to subjects with normal renal function.
Acute upper respiratory tract infection(AURI) is common in children, and viral infection is the main cause. However, several children with viral infection are easy to suffer from secondary bacterial infection, and the mechanism is unclear.
No biological marker is highly specific of infection and currently available, especially for bacterial infection. The ideal marker would be easy to perform, rapidly, inexpensive, and correlated with the severity and prognosis of the infection. decreased in eosinophil count (EC) is unspecific of a particular clinical picture and may support a systemic inflammation, whereas the deeper the eosinopenia is, the darker is the prognosis in ICU. The duration of eosinopenia is not clearly documented, but it has been recently shown that EC tends to normalization, rapidly after appropriate and effective antimicrobial therapy in case of bacterial infection among adults patients hospitalized in a medicine ward. In the light of this findings, Terradas et al. described that EC returned back to normal between the day 2 or day 3 in survivors, indicating a potential interest as a predictive marker of the evolution among hospitalized patients. To the best of our knowledge, no work has studied eosinopenia as a prognostic marker of mortality during bacterial infections in the elderly patients in a hospital setting. Our study aims to evaluate the prognosis value of the EC in a geriatric unit of tertiary care hospital.
1. A retrospective analysis was performed to determine the prevalence of multidrug- resistant organisms infection in ICU from October 2017 to October 2019. 2. Non-MDRO patients were selected by random sampling in a ratio of 1:1 to the final MDRO group during the same period , and select the risk factors of infection with multi-drug resistant bacteria by comparing the two groups. 3. Randomly select 30% of the sample size as the validation set, and the remaining 70% for the training set to establish a model. Using multi-factor Logistic regression, decision tree classification, artificial neural network, support vector machine, Bayesian network Method to establish risk assessment system for multidrug-resistant organisms infection respectively.Using validation set data to calculate the area under the ROC curve (AUC) and sensitivity, specificity of models and comparing the prediction accuracy of several models. Finally, choose a more suitable risk assessment system for multidrug-resistant organisms infection. 4. Predict the patient's infection risk level according to the best risk assessment system and develop a low-to-high intervention plan.
To assess the efficacy of temocillin compared to carbapenems for the management of ESBL-E UTI.
This observational, prospective, multicenter study, conducted in nine French Pediatric and Neonatal Intensive Care Units (ICUs), will assess the antibiotic therapy for a child hospitalized in ICU and receiving systemic antibiotics for an episode of suspected or proven community-acquired or nosocomial bacterial infection. The study will describe the mean duration of antibiotic therapy, as well as compliance with the recommendations concerning the duration of antibiotic therapy, the choice of antibiotics, the daily dosage and the number of doses per 24 hours according to the type of bacterial infection. Patients will be monitored until the end of their hospitalization.
The objective is to compare the timeliness of anchor antibiotic administration in the emergency department (ED) after initial dosing with and without a Best Practice Alert in Epic (BPA) implemented to remind physicians to re-order the antibiotic. We hypothesize that post-BPA implementation, physicians will have a higher rate of ordering subsequent doses of antibiotics on-time and with the correct dosages compared to pre-BPA implementation.
Periprosthetic infection following shoulder arthroplasty is a devastating complication. Diagnosing and treating periprosthetic shoulder infection poses a significant challenge. At the forefront of this issue is Cutibacterium acnes because the current prophylactic regimens are insufficient to eradicate C acnes from the surgical field. It is believed that C acnes infections occur during surgery when the sebaceous glands in the skin are cut and exposed, leading to C acnes contaminating the surgeon's instruments and gloves and, thus, the surgical wound. The purpose of this study is to examine if making skin incisions using electrocautery will result in decreased C acnes contamination during shoulder arthroplasty. To this end, we propose a randomized clinical trial where patients undergoing shoulder arthroplasty are randomized into two groups - Electrocautery incision group (Electro) vs. Scalpel incision group (Scalpel) - and swab cultures are obtained from the skin incision and operating surgeon's gloves and forceps
A trial investigating the effect of a sinus rinse in people with CF
This Phase 1 study will assess the safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetics (PK) of QPX7831, a beta-lactamase inhibitor, when administered orally in single ascending doses and in multiple ascending doses to heathy adult subjects.