The substantiation for rational antibacterial therapy of respiratory tract bacterial diseases in children

2015 ◽  
pp. 57-62
Author(s):  
G.O. Lezhenko ◽  
◽  
O.E. Pashkova ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-83
Author(s):  
M. Bajtoš ◽  
M. Kožár

Abstract Bacterial diseases of the upper respiratory tract accompanied with various degrees of clinical signs are relatively frequent in a small animal clinical practice. The clinical signs are usually mild, mostly connected with clinical manifestation of nasal discharge, mild dyspnoea, sneezing, and coughing; however, in some cases they may convert to a chronic stage with serious systemic manifestations. The course and development of complications depends on the etiological agent and the success or failure of the subsequent therapy. An accurate diagnosis is of the upmost importance in order to develop an appropriate therapeutic plan for disease management. The present study focused on: endoscopic visualisation of the upper respiratory tract of the affected animals; localisation of pathological changes, and the targeted collection of the samples. This clinical study involved 26 patients with long-term signs of the affected airways that progressed to chronic stages after the failure of the prescribed therapy. Each patient was clinically examined, sedated and subjected to an endoscopic examination that involved the collection of samples. The samples were examined microbiologically, tested for antibiotic resistance, and a targeted therapy was implemented. The endoscopic and complex microbiological diagnosis enabled: more effective management of the bacterial infection; shortening of the therapy; and a convalescence period that reduced the risk of the development, or the spreading of resistant bacteria.


Pharmateca ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 1_2021 ◽  
pp. 49-57
Author(s):  
E.E. Lokshina Lokshina ◽  
O.V. Zaytseva Zaytseva ◽  
S.V. Zaytseva Zaytseva ◽  
◽  

Author(s):  
Nikola Kurbatfinski ◽  
Steven D. Goodman ◽  
Lauren O. Bakaletz

New strategies to treat diseases wherein biofilms contribute significantly to pathogenesis are needed as biofilm-resident bacteria are highly recalcitrant to antibiotics due to physical biofilm architecture and a canonically quiescent metabolism, among many additional attributes. We, and others, have shown that when biofilms are dispersed or disrupted, bacteria released from biofilm residence are in a distinct physiologic state that, in part, renders these bacteria highly sensitive to killing by specific antibiotics. We sought to demonstrate the breadth of ability of a recently humanized monoclonal antibody against an essential biofilm structural element (DNABII protein) to disrupt biofilms formed by respiratory tract pathogens and potentiate antibiotic-mediated killing of bacteria released from biofilm residence. Biofilms formed by six respiratory tract pathogens were significantly disrupted by the humanized monoclonal antibody in a dose- and time-dependent manner, as corroborated by CLSM imaging. Bacteria newly released from the biofilms of 3 of 6 species were significantly more sensitive than their planktonic counterparts to killing by 2 of 3 antibiotics currently used clinically and were now also equally as sensitive to killing by the 3 rd antibiotic. The remaining 3 pathogens were significantly more susceptible to killing by all 3 antibiotics. A humanized monoclonal antibody directed against protective epitopes of a DNABII protein effectively released six diverse respiratory tract pathogens from biofilm residence in a phenotypic state that was now as, or significantly more, sensitive to killing by three antibiotics currently indicated for use clinically. These data support this targeted, combinatorial, species-agnostic therapy to mitigate chronic bacterial diseases.


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