REVIEW
Role of anaerobic beta-lactamase-producing bacteria in upper respiratory tract infections.
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal 1987 March
Bacteroides sp. (Bacteroides melaninogenicus, Bacteroides oralis and Bacteroides fragilis), peptostreptococci and Fusobacterium sp. are important pathogens in upper respiratory tract infections. A recent increase in numbers of beta-lactamase-producing strains of anaerobic Gram-negative bacteria in upper respiratory tract infections has been associated with increased failure rates of penicillins in eradication of these infections. These infections include chronic otitis media, chronic sinusitis and mastoiditis, chronic recurrent tonsillitis and lung abscesses. The indirect pathogenicity of these organisms is apparent through their ability not only to survive penicillin therapy but also to protect penicillin-susceptible pathogens from the drug. These direct and indirect virulence characteristics of anaerobic bacteria require the administration of appropriate antimicrobial therapy directed against all pathogens in mixed infections.
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