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Query: UMLS:C0004610 (
bacteremia
)
13,199
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 64-year-old woman presented with retroperitoneal lymphoma metastatic to the left ureter. Lymphoma was not diagnosed and her clinical course was not fully explained until after surgery. The lack of superficial lymphoma delayed diagnosis and therefore prevented effective treatment. Her situation became unmanageable when it was complicated by
bacteremia
(E coli) and
fungemia
(Candida albicans).
...
PMID:Metastatic lymphoma in the ureter complicated by bacteremia and fungemia. 37 Oct 14
In 93 recipients of 102 orthotopic liver homografts, the incidence of
bacteremia
or
fungemia
exceeded 70%. The graft itself was usually an entry site for systemic infection after both immunologic and nonimmunologic parenchymal injury, especially if there was defective biliary drainage. The role of the homograft itself as the special infectious risk factor has prompted increased use of defunctionalized jejunal Roux limbs to reduce graft contamination. It has also stimulated very aggressive postoperative diagnostic efforts to rule out remedial mechanical complications of the transplant.
...
PMID:Infections complicating orthotopic liver transplantation: a study emphasizing graft-related septicemia. 79 68
In order to optimize the clinical management of fever in acute myelocytic leukemia (AML), our experience with febrile patients during two therapy periods was reviewed. A structured approach to the management of fever was then devised and evaluated during a third period. Among a total of 104 patients with AML, 77 were febrile at presentation. Only agranulocytic patients (15%) had severe infection, while 43% had localized sites which responded to specific antibiotic therapy. The remainder (42%) had fever functionally attributed to leukemia. In contrast, life-threatening infection occurred in most patients (90%) after antileukemic treatment was begun. During the trial therapy period, the empiric use of carbenicillin-gentamicin for fever greater than or equal to 101 degree F during aplasia reduced the incidence of sepsis from 90 to 30% and of
bacteremia
from 50 to 23%. The fall in the incidence of blood and localized site cultures positive for Pseudomonas aeruginosa from 65 to 15% corresponded to a reduction in the number of distinct organisms per site from 1.6 to 1.0. These data suggest that hematogenously born invasion of infected sites by endogenous organisms has been prevented. Aplastic patients with fever responded to therapy by defervescing (54%) or improving clinically (34%). Stopping antibiotics once started while evaluating persistent fever was detrimental. Although the early empiric use of amphotericin B reduced the incidence of
fungemia
, its proper use in fever management is yet to be determined.
...
PMID:The clinical significance and management of fever in acute myelocytic leukemia. 82 Sep 17
During a 14 month period there were 364 episodes of
bacteremia
and
fungemia
at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. The first nine months of the study were retrospective, and the next five prospective. In patients with leukemia or lymphoma (group 1), Escherichia coli, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus were the most frequently isolated organisms. The mortality in this group was 40.5 per cent. In the patients with solid tumor (group 2), Esch. coli, Staph. aureus, Bacteroides sp. and Candida sp. were most frequent. Mortality was 27.8 per cent. The source of infection in both groups was often indeterminate. High mortality was associated with pulmonary and intraabdominal infection and with Ps. aeruginosa, K. pneumoniae or polymicrobic sepsis. Factors of prognostic significance were the causative microorganism, source of infection and shock. Although mortality was higher in patients with leukopenia than in those with normal leukocyte counts, the differences were not significant. The mortality in this series was low considering the severity of the underlying diseases and the immunosuppressed state of many of the patients. In a prospective, randomly controlled study, mortality was further diminished by infectious disease consultation at the time the positive blood culture was reported. Severe fungal superinfection, predominantly aspergillosis and candidiasis, was found in 52 per cent of the autopsy patients with leukemia or lymphoma (group 1), but in only 8 per cent of those with solid tumors (group 2).
...
PMID:Bacteremia and fungemia complicating neoplastic disease. A study of 364 cases. 87 Nov 28
Serum opsonic activity for E. coli 075, conversion of C3 by inulin, total hemolytic complement (CH(50)), levels of native C3, factor B, C3b inactivator (KAF), properdin (P), and immunoglobulins (Ig) were determined in 14 patients with burns involving 13% to 91% body surface during 6 to 8 weeks postburn. In the 12 uninfected patients, levels of IgG and IgA were reduced during the first 10 days postburn, and decreased concentrations of P and IgM were demonstrated from three to 6 weeks postburn. C3 conversion was reduced from 10 days to 6 weeks postburn. Levels of C3, factor B, and KAF were normal or elevated for the entire study period. No difference in the occurrence of humoral abnormalities was noted in patients with burns caused by flame, immersion scald, or acid contact. Reduction in C3 conversion and P concentration were the only abnormalities which correlated with increasing burn size.
Bacteremia
and/or
fungemia
was documented in the other two patients. In one of these patients, reduction in CH(50) occurred during septicemia due to S. aureus, and in the other, reduction in all measurements of complement was associated with candidemia and Pseudomonas septicemia and occurred prior to the development of shock. Serum opsonic activity was only reduced significantly during sepsis, suggesting that this abnormality occurred as a result rather than a cause of infection. These results indicate that consumption of components of the classical and/or alternative pathways of complement activation may be an important mechanism by which infection is perpetuated in the burn patient. They also emphasize the importance of the clinical management of the burn patient in preventing the development of septic complications.
...
PMID:Changes in humoral components of host defense following burn trauma. 87 73
The purpose of this study was to analyze 98 febrile patients with suspected catheter-related
bacteremia
(CRB) or
fungemia
(CRF) and compare two different methods, one semiquantitative (SQ) (Maki's method) and the other quantitative (Q) (modification of Brun-Buisson method) to determine each ability for diagnosing CRB. Twelve patients had CRB or CRF. The sensitivity, specificity, positive, and negative predictive values, and efficiency using the Maki method were 83%, 84%, 42%, 97%, and 83%, respectively. The same parameters using the other method were as follows: 92%, 84%, 44%, 99%, and 84%, respectively. Although the diagnostic reliability in each method was similar, the Maki method was quicker and easier to perform in clinical microbiology laboratories.
...
PMID:Catheter-related bacteremia and fungemia. Reliability of two methods for catheter culture. 142 13
Two hundred fifteen (23%) of 955 episodes of
bacteremia
(defined as including
fungemia
) detected in adult patients during 2 years were of unknown origin. Sixty-six percent of episodes of unknown origin were hospital acquired. The median age of patients with
bacteremia
of unknown origin was 65 years, and their most common underlying disorders were solid malignancy (28% of patients) and diabetes mellitus (18%). Only three factors were associated with
bacteremia
of unknown origin (as opposed to episodes with a known source): peripheral venous catheterization, hemodialysis, and plasmapheresis. Gram-negative bacteria were isolated from the blood in 62% of episodes of unknown origin; 10% of episodes were polymicrobial. Staphylococci were isolated from 67% of patients undergoing hemodialysis and from 37% of those with diabetes; Pseudomonas species from 15% of patients with hospital-acquired episodes; and Candida species from 21% of patients with a central venous catheter. Fifteen percent of episodes in cancer patients were polymicrobial. Empirical antibiotic treatment was inappropriate in 49% of episodes of unknown origin and in 35% of episodes with a known source (P less than .001). Death rates were 44% and 25% in episodes of unknown and known origin, respectively. An unknown source of
bacteremia
was independently associated with a fatal outcome.
...
PMID:Bacteremia and fungemia of unknown origin in adults. 161 68
In a collaborative study at three university hospitals, the recovery of microorganisms and the speed of detection of microbial growth by the BacT/Alert (Organon Teknika Corporation, Durham, N.C.) and BACTEC 660/730 (Becton-Dickinson Diagnostic Instrument Systems, Sparks, Md.) nonradiometric blood culture systems were compared. A total of 5,918 comparisons were made between BacT/Alert aerobic and BACTEC NR 6A bottles and 5,992 comparisons were made between BacT/Alert anaerobic and BACTEC NR 7A bottles. Each bottle was inoculated with 5 ml of blood. The overall recoveries of microorganisms from the two aerobic bottles were comparable; members of the family Enterobacteriaceae were recovered more often from BacT/Alert aerobic bottles alone (P less than 0.001). The overall recoveries of microorganisms from the anaerobic bottles were not significantly different. Growth of Staphylococcus aureus (P less than 0.001), coagulase-negative staphylococci (P less than 0.01), streptococci (P less than 0.001), Escherichia coli (P less than 0.01), other members of the family Enterobacteriaceae (P less than 0.02), and Pseudomonas aeruginosa (P less than 0.05) was detected earlier in BacT/Alert aerobic bottles. Growth of S. aureus (P less than 0.001), coagulase-negative staphylococci (P less than 0.05), enterococci (P less than 0.01), Streptococcus pneumoniae (P less than 0.02), viridans group streptococci (P less than 0.05), E. coli (P less than 0.001), Klebsiella pneumoniae (P less than 0.01), and other members of the family Enterobacteriaceae (P less than 0.001) was detected earlier in BacT/Alert anaerobic bottles. In a system-versus-system comparison, more gram-positive cocci were recovered from the BACTEC system alone (P < 0.05), and more members or the family Enterobacteriaceae were recovered from the BacT/Alert system alone (P < 0.001). As a system, the BacT/Alert system detected growth of S. aureus (P < 0.001), coagulase-negative staphylococci (P < 0.01), streptococci (P < 0.001), E. coli (P < 0.001), other members of the familyEnterobacteriaceae (P < 0.001), and P. aeruginosa (P < 0.05) earlier than the BACTEC system did. Significantly fewer (40 versus 1,183) false-positive results occurred with the BacT/Alert system. We conclude that the BacT/Alert and BACTEC 660/730 nonradiometric systems are comparable for recovering clinically significant microorganisms form adult patients with
bacteremia
or
fungemia
, but that the BacT/Alert system detects microbial growth earlier than the BACTEC system does, with significantly fewer false-positive results.
...
PMID:Controlled comparison of the BacT/Alert and BACTEC 660/730 nonradiometric blood culture systems. 153
To define risk factors for mortality due to
bacteremia
and
fungemia
of childhood, 242 episodes (for which the mortality rate was 19%) were studied prospectively by univariate and multivariate analyses. The mortality rate was higher in neonates (23%) and in individuals 10-18 years old (26%) than in infants and young children (10%-16%). The mortality rate was 29% for children who had neutropenia, 29% for those who had received therapy with steroids, 26% for those who had received antibiotics, and 75% for those who were in septic shock. The fatality rates for polymicrobial
bacteremia
(40%), recurrent
bacteremia
(67%), and hospital-acquired
bacteremia
(28%) were higher than those for other types of
bacteremia
; the fatality rate was related to inappropriate empiric antibiotic treatment or to the specific organism isolated (mortality rates associated with the latter ranged from 0 to 60%). Seven variables that independently and significantly affected mortality were defined with use of multivariate logistic regression analysis: septic shock (odds ratio [OR], 26.4); polymicrobial (OR, 5.4), recurrent (OR, 4.5), or hospital-acquired (OR, 4.3)
bacteremia
; candidemia (OR, 3.6); inappropriate antibiotic treatment (OR, 2.4); and neutropenia (OR, 2.3). These variables should be considered for adequate management of bacteremic patients who are at high risk for death.
...
PMID:Risk factors for mortality due to bacteremia and fungemia in childhood. 157 93
One hundred and ninety-one triple lumen central venous catheters were placed into 107 sites in 81 surgical and trauma patients who were prospectively studied to determine the rate of catheter related infection using a subcutaneous cuff of biodegradable collagen containing bactericidal silver and a guide wire exchange protocol. Thirty-seven sites in 36 nonseptic patients (group 1) were compared with 70 sites in 45 septic patients (group 2). The data were also compared with data consecutively collected one year earlier, using the same exchange protocol without the cuff. Fourteen of 70 sites in group 2 had catheter related infections, with seven causing bloodstream infection. Five of 14 were the result of fungus, with three causing
fungemia
. Two of 37 sites in group 1 had catheter related infections (p = 0.044), with no associated
bacteremia
. The number of triple lumen catheter related infections and associated
bacteremia
or
fungemia
are higher in septic patients compared with nonseptic critically ill surgical and trauma patients. The cuff significantly prolongs time of catheter site use in patients who are nonseptic, but may be of no benefit in reducing infection rates or prolonging site use time in patients who are septic and may predispose to fungal colonization.
...
PMID:The influence of an attachable subcutaneous cuff for preventing triple lumen catheter infections in critically ill surgical and trauma patients. 162 Nov 97
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