Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0004610 (
bacteremia
)
13,199
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Over a period of 6 years 192 cases of
urosepsis
have been recorded and managed in our urological department. In almost all cases (97%) the primary focus of infection was the urinary tract and the responsible microorganisms were Gram-negative rods, in order Enterobacter, B. Proteus, E. Coli, Klebsiella and others. Clinical features were dominated by symptoms related to failure or insufficiency of end organs (fever, hypotension, oliguria, mental disorders, respiratory distress etc.).
Bacteremia
was diagnosed with an incidence of 66%, septic shock 12% and MSOF 20%. Negative bacteriological tests do not rule out the diagnosis of systemic infection. Risk factors are considered advanced age, uremia, diabetes, malnutrition and extensive surgery.
...
PMID:Clinical comments on management of urosepsis in a general urological department. 141 20
For 4 days before surgical repair of a diverticulitic colovesical fistula and for 6 days after, a 63-year-old man was treated with 2 g of intravenous cefotetan disodium every 12 hours for associated
urosepsis
with
bacteremia
. Postoperatively, the patient followed a diet of intravenous nutrition only. Uneventful convalescence was interrupted by signs of sudden major blood loss, accompanied by prolonged prothrombin time. After stabilization with packed red blood cells, fresh plasma, crystalloids, and parenteral vitamin K, laparotomy revealed a huge intra-abdominal clot, which was evacuated. This case illustrates the risk of unexpected hypoprothrombinemia and hemorrhage in a cefotetan-treated surgical patient who demonstrated none of the usual comorbid conditions generally described in patients with antibiotic-induced hypoprothrombinemia. Like cefamandole nafate, cefoperazone sodium, moxalactam disodium, and other cephalosporins containing the methylthiotetrazole side chain, cefotetan appears to pose an unusual risk of major bleeding.
...
PMID:Hypoprothrombinemia and hemorrhage in a surgical patient treated with cefotetan. 190 Dec 5
Unusual infections associated with colorectal tumors may, in some instances, be the sole clue to the presence of a malignancy. The infections are either related to invasion of tissues or organs in close proximity to the tumor or secondary to distant seeding by transient
bacteremia
arising from necrotic tumors. Seven patients seen at one hospital over a 5-year period illustrate the clinical presentations of such infections. The infections identified in these seven patients include endocarditis, meningitis, nontraumatic gas gangrene, empyema, hepatic abscesses, retroperitoneal abscess, clostridial sepsis, and colovesical fistulae with
urosepsis
. A computer-assisted search of the English-language literature and cross-checks from other review articles identified other infections associated with colon cancer, which include nontraumatic crepitant cellulitis, suppurative thyroiditis, pericarditis, appendicitis, pulmonary microabscesses, septic arthritis, and fever of unknown origin. The clinical importance of these infections and their correlation with colorectal malignancies are reviewed.
...
PMID:Unusual infections associated with colorectal cancer. 328 64
The elderly segment of the population is growing at a rapid rate; this "longevity revolution" is associated with an increasing prevalence of bacteriuria and UTI. Asymptomatic bacteriuria generally requires no treatment. In the absence of obstructive uropathy or infected calculi, asymptomatic bacteriuria in the elderly pursues a benign course. Prevention of UTIs is needed to avoid the risks of symptomatic infection,
bacteremia
, and
urosepsis
. Indwelling catheters should be left in situ for short periods of time, and alternative methods of bladder drainage should be used whenever possible. Coexistent chronic disease should be optimally managed and every effort made to avoid invasive procedures and limit GU instrumentation.
...
PMID:Urinary tract infection in the elderly. 329 82
The incidence, ecology, and mortality of gram-negative bacillary
bacteremia
in elderly patients were studied in an analysis of 334 episodes over a four-year-period in a 489-bed North Carolina community teaching hospital, 135 (40.4%) of which occurred in patients 70 years of age or older. The
bacteremia
rate per 1000 hospital admissions increased sharply with increasing age. The ecology and in vitro antimicrobial susceptibilities of the bacterial isolates were strongly influenced by community v hospital acquisition, but not by age.
Urosepsis
was significantly more likely to be the underlying source of hospital-acquired
bacteremia
in patients 70 years or older (P less than 0.01). Total
bacteremia
-related mortality did not increase with increasing age; in the group of patients aged 70 years or older with nonfatal/ultimately fatal underlying diseases (NF/UFUD), however, mortality was 9.1% compared to 2.9% in the younger age group (P less than 0.001). Significantly increased
bacteremia
-related mortality was also noted in the older patients with NF/UFUD admitted from nursing homes (P less than 0.05) and those not treated with an appropriate antimicrobial agent within 24 hours (P less than 0.01). Overall, the older patients with hospital-acquired
bacteremia
, neutropenia-associated infection, those bacteremic from a nonurinary source of infection, and those treated with multiple-drug regimens had higher mortality (P less than 0.05). Gram-negative bacteremia is much more common in patients 70 years of age or older and compared with younger patients mortality appears to be significantly increased for the important subgroup of older patients with nonfatal or ultimately fatal underlying diseases.
...
PMID:Gram-negative bacillary bacteremia in the elderly: incidence, ecology, etiology, and mortality. 381 60
Urinary tract infection (UTI) is a common problem treated by emergency physicians. A midstream urine sample remains the most frequent method of culture collection. Although midstream urine culture growing more than 10(5) colony-forming units per milliliter (cfu/mL) has been considered diagnostic of UTI, high false-positive and false-negative rates as well as a lack of precision have been associated with this method of collection. Alternative methods of establishing the diagnosis of UTI have excellent sensitivity and may be utilized at the time of patient presentation. These include the detection of leukocyte esterase activity in urine and the presence of one or more bacteria on microscopic examination of an unspun urine sample. Women of child-bearing age represent the vast majority of patients seen with UTI. Uncomplicated infection of the urinary tract has a generally benign course in these patients, and is rarely associated with long-term complications. In addition, these patients are infected with a predictable spectrum of uropathogens that respond to the commonly used antibiotics. It appears that urine cultures provide little additional information in this patient population. Urine cultures should be obtained in patients at high risk for pyelonephritis or
bacteremia
/
urosepsis
, as well as in those expected to have uncommon or resistant organisms.
...
PMID:Utility of urine cultures in the emergency department. 394 79
A prospective study was done on the clinical, laboratory, radiological, immunological and therapeutic features of acute, symptomatic, bacteremic
urosepsis
in 34 consecutive, elderly patients who required hospitalization. Urinary tract infection was identified as the most common cause of gram-negative
bacteremia
in elderly patients admitted to a community hospital. Appropriate antibiotic therapy and a lack of serious associated medical illnesses contributed to the high survival rate.
Bacteremia
and shock occurring in the wake of pyelonephritis develop more commonly in elderly than in young women. In the elderly patient with
bacteremia
and pyelonephritis radiographic evaluation invariably demonstrates obstruction to urine flow, calculous disease or abscess. Guidelines are provided for the therapy of acute, symptomatic bacteremic
urosepsis
.
...
PMID:Community-acquired bacteremic urosepsis in the elderly patients: a prospective study of 34 consecutive episodes. 705 Apr 17
In a prospective pilot study, 26 patients with non-infection-related renal or ureteric stones and sterile urine were examined for evidence of bacteriuria and
bacteremia
following extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (SWL). Blood samples were obtained for aerobic and anaerobic bacterial culture at the end of, and 1 hour after, the SWL procedure. Urine cultures were performed 24 hours before and after treatment.
Bacteremia
was recorded in 7.7% of the patients immediately after SWL but in no patient at 1 hour after treatment. None of the patients manifested significant bacteriuria or post-SWL fever. These findings support the contention that, provided the urine is sterile and a negative history of
urosepsis
is available, antibiotic prophylaxis is unnecessary in patients with non-infected renal stones submitted to SWL treatment.
...
PMID:Incidence of bacteremia and bacteriuria in patients with non-infection-related urinary stones undergoing extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy. 812 34
The recent discovery of a geographically dispersed clonal group of Escherichia coli O4:H5 that includes prototypic uropathogenic strain J96 prompted us to determine the prevalence of J96-like strains within serogroup O4 and to further assess the characteristics of such strains. We used O:K:H;F serotyping, PCR-based genomic fingerprinting, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), multilocus enzyme electrophoresis (MLEE), and PCR detection of the three papG alleles and of the cytotoxic necrotizing factor 1 (cnf1) and aerobactin (aer) gene sequences to characterize the 15 O4 strains among 336 E. coli isolates from three clinical collections (187 from mixed-source
bacteremia
, 75 from
urosepsis
, and 74 from acute cystitis). J96-like strains constituted approximately half of the O4 strains, or 2% of the total population. In contrast to other O4 strains, the J96-like strains characteristically exhibited specific group III capsular antigens, the H5 flagellar and F13 fimbrial antigens, a distinctive PCR genomic fingerprint, the class III papG allele (plus, in 50% of strains, the enigmatic class I papG allele), and cnf1 but lacked aer. A subset of these strains was remarkably homogeneous with respect to all these characteristics and exhibited a distinctive PFGE fingerprint and MLEE pattern. These findings clarify the epidemiological relevance of J96 as a model extraintestinal pathogen, provide further evidence of the class I papG allele outside of strain J96, and offer insights into the evolution of E. coli serogroup O4.
...
PMID:Characteristics and prevalence within serogroup O4 of a J96-like clonal group of uropathogenic Escherichia coli O4:H5 containing the class I and class III alleles of papG. 916 45
The occurrence of urinary tract infection and its clinical impact is determined, as with any infectious disease, by the interaction between the virulence of the infecting organism and the host defense mechanisms that can be mobilized. In the case of urinary tract infections, an anatomically and functionally intact kidney and urinary tract are the primary host defenses, with phagocytic function and immune mechanisms coming into play to limit the consequences of those infections. Of all the categories of immunocompromised hosts, the renal transplant patient is the one most susceptible to the direct and indirect consequences of urinary tract infections. In the first 3 months post transplant, the incidence of urinary tract infection is greater than 30%, and there is a relatively high rate of
bacteremia
and overt pyelonephritis of the allograft. After this time period, unless anatomic or functional derangement of the urinary tract is present, the direct clinical manifestations are far more benign. In addition to the direct effects of urinary tract infection on these patients, indirect effects are also important. These include the activation of CMV by TNF released as a consequence of a urinary tract infection and the initiation of allograft injury. Fortunately, low-dose trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole or fluoroquinolones are safe and effective prophylactic strategies for preventing the direct and indirect consequences of urinary tract infections. Although the pathogenetic mechanisms are incompletely understood, data are emerging that AIDS patients have both an increased incidence and severity of urinary tract infection. The risk for urinary tract infections seem to be correlated with the degree of immune compromise and, perhaps, the amount of malnutrition and wasting that are present. The best strategies for preventing
urosepsis
in AIDS patients remain to be defined.
...
PMID:Urinary tract infection in the immunocompromised host. Lessons from kidney transplantation and the AIDS epidemic. 937 31
1
2
3
4
Next >>