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)
Acute otitis media was produced in 110 chinchillas by inoculation of type 23 Streptococcus pneumoniae directly into the middle ear cavity by tympanotomy. During the first three days after inoculation, inflammatory cells were seen in the mucoperiosteum of the middle ear. After four to seven days, there was purulent exudation in the middle ear cavity, and 40% of the animals had pneumococcal meningitis and/or
bacteremia
. The middle ears were sterile in five of 28 animals sacrificed during the second week and in six of seven animals sacrificed at six weeks, although subepithelial changes persisted in the mucoperiosteum. Levels of antibody to S. pneumoniae in serum were measured by radioimmunoassay; mean values were 6.1 ng of pneumococcal antibody
nitrogen
/ml in 28 uninfected control animals and 16.5 ng of antibody
nitrogen
/ml in 29 animals sacrificed two weeks after inoculation (P less than 0.025). Opsonic activity of serum against S. pneumoniae was evaluated in infected and uninfected chinchillas. The opsonic titer was significantly higher in infected animals sacrificed at six weeks than in uninfected controls. Although pneumococcal polysaccharide antigen was found by counterimmunoelectrophoresis in 25 of 30 middle ear effusions, it could not be detected in the serum from infected animals. Methods for infection and sacrifice of chinchillas yielded reproducible results. This model should permit evaluation of the pathologic response to other serotypes of S. pneumoniae and possibly to prophylactic and therapeutic regimes.
...
PMID:Experimental otitis media due to Streptococcus pneumoniae: immunopathogenic response in the chinchilla. 1 36
Postsplenectomy, 41 patients previously treated for Hodgkin's disease were given pneumococcal vaccine, and type-specific antibody levels were measured before and after immunization. Postimmunization antibody levels in patients with Hodgkin's disease were significantly lower than those in normal control subjects for 10 of the 12 serotypes measured. Mean postimmunization antibody level for patients (587 +/- 427 ng of antibody
nitrogen
/mL) was much lower than that for control subjects (1787 +/- 694). Antibody levels tended to increase with time from therapy for Hodgkin's disease, and several patients who had not received therapy for more than 3 years had normal responses to immunization. Despite vaccination, one patient developed pneumococcal meningitis and another, pneumococcal
bacteremia
. Both infected patients had low postimmunization mean antibody levels (282 and 137 ng/mL, respectively). Postsplenectomy sepsis in patients with Hodgkin's disease is related to a humoral immune deficiency probably induced by radiation and chemotherapy, and this immune deficiency persists for several years.
...
PMID:Response of patients with Hodgkin's disease to pneumococcal vaccine. 3 21
The protective effect of active immunization with Salmonella minnesota Re bacilli or lipid A was assessed in the granulocytopenic rabbit model. Animals were immunized with Re bacilli, lipid A, or Pseudomonas aeruginosa as a nonspecific immunogen. After colonization with one of three enterobacterial strains (two Escherichia coli, one Enterobacter aerogenes), the immunized rabbits as well as controls given saline injections were made leukopenic with
nitrogen
mustard and monitored for fever,
bacteremia
, and death. Survival rates were significantly greater in Re-immunized animals than in saline controls or P. aeruginosa-immunized animals. Immunization with lipid A afforded no protection. In addition, rabbits immunized with Re mutant bacilli developed
bacteremia
less frequently than the others, indicating that antibody to Re may inhibit invasion of the intestinal mucosa as well as protect after
bacteremia
has developed.
...
PMID:Immunization with R mutants of Salmonella minnesota. II. Comparison of the protective effect of immunization with lipid A and the Re mutant. 40 61
Hypocaloric near isosmotic infusions of crystalline amino acids have the same effect on
nitrogen
balance as do equal caloric infusions of glucose in burned patients with and without
bacteremia
. The effects of the two substrates on balance appeared equal and additive. Infusion of a 10 per cent soybean oil emulsion was indistinguishable from low dosage glucose when administered with amino acids. Near isosmotic hypocaloric diets containing glucose and amino acids significantly diminish
nitrogen
loss in severely burned patients. A combination of both substrates in the infusate is to be preferred.
...
PMID:Effect of intravenous near isosmotic nutrient infusions on nitrogen balance in critically ill injured patients. 40 58
To investigate three possible causes of the acute hemolysis in the hemolytic-uremic syndrome, we studied prospectively 207 children and 34 adults with shigellosis in Bangladesh. Nineteen children showed acute hemolytic anemia, a leukemoid reaction, thrombocytopenia and oliguria; nine other had, in addition, a serum urea
nitrogen
level of over 100 mg per diciliter. Eight of the nine had pseudomembranous colitis, and six of the nine died. The frequency of
bacteremia
was similar in all grades of shigellosis. Circulating immune complexes were found in 10 of 20 patients with uncomplicated shigellosis and in four of six with severe hemolytic-uremic syndrome. Limulus assay for endotoxemia was positive in nine of 18 patients with hemolysis (50 per cent) and three of 61 with uncomplicated shigellosis (5 per cent) (P less than 0.001). These data support the hypothesis that severe colitis in shigellosis is associated with circulating endotoxin from the colon producing coagulopathy, renal microangiopathy and hemolytic anemia.
...
PMID:Hemolytic-uremic syndrome after shigellosis. Relation to endotoxemia and circulating immune complexes. 64 73
Energy and protein requirements following operation, are those levels which permit the best possible use of fatty and protein body reserves, without the resistance to trauma becoming diminished. The fatty reserves in a 70 kg man, correspond to 72 000 calories and require, to be used without danger of acidosis, 100 or, preferably, 200 g of glucose daily. Energy expenditure may be about 1 200 calories, thus much less than one would think. Fat does not have the antiketosis effects, nor the
nitrogen
sparing effects of glucose and their interest in raising calory intake has not been demonstrated. There is a level of
nitrogen
intake of about 20 to 30 g of protein, below which,
nitrogen
balance becomes rapidly negative and one then has to increase considerably the protein intake to 80 or 90 g to restore
nitrogen
balance. 200 g of carbohydrate, then 20 to 30 g of amino-acid, provide a calory intake of 900, easily administrable by the parenteral route, without the danger of
bacteremia
with more hypertonic solutions in infected operated patients. Higher calory intakes are only indicated in multiple trauma and burns.
...
PMID:[Energy and protein needs of surgical patients]. 122 36
A prospective study measured ionized calcium and parathormone sequentially at 48- to 72-hour intervals in 25 surgical intensive care unit patients. Twelve patients (48%) died at mean day 40 and median day 26. Levels of ionized calcium, parathormone, blood urea
nitrogen
, creatinine, albumin, magnesium, and phosphate for patients who lived were compared with levels for patients who died. The incidence of hypotension, renal failure (creatinine greater than or equal to 3.0), and
bacteremia
, as well as the amount of red cell, crystalloid, and colloid administration for the two groups was compared. Hypotension,
bacteremia
, red cells, crystalloid, and colloid were no different. On days 1 and 2 ionized calcium levels were significantly lower and parathormone levels significantly higher in nonsurviving patients; this difference persisted through days 3 and 4. Blood urea
nitrogen
and creatinine levels increased early in nonsurviving patients but renal failure, which occurred in nine nonsurviving patients, did not develop until mean day 14, median day 18. The phosphate level was slightly higher but still within normal range in nonsurviving patients. By days 5 and 6 ionized calcium and parathormone levels were no different in nonsurviving patients, despite there being no improvement in renal function. Magnesium and albumin levels were no different between groups. Ionized calcium levels are lower and parathormone levels higher early in nonsurviving patients. This difference is not readily explained by associated clinical conditions, including renal dysfunction. Although etiology remains unclear, low ionized calcium and elevated parathormone are early predictors of mortality in critically ill surgical patients.
...
PMID:Ionized calcium, parathormone, and mortality in critically ill surgical patients. 222 19
We observed 5 episodes of pneumococcal infection among 129 cardiac transplant patients between March 1985 and December 1987, giving an estimated incidence of 36 cases per 1000 patient-years. Infections occurred a mean of 58 days after transplantation and included
bacteremia
with empyema,
bacteremia
alone, and pneumonia. All patients recovered from their infections. There was no correlation between infection and age, sex, immunosuppression, or rejection episodes. We also measured antibody levels to 12 pneumococcal antigens in 6 unvaccinated, uninfected patients before and after cardiac transplantation, to see if baseline antibody levels decreased. Protective levels of antibody were defined as greater than or equal to 300 ng of anticapsular antibody
nitrogen
per milliliter serum. Before transplantation patients had protective antibody levels to a mean of 8.7 +/- 1.2 pneumococcal serotypes; after transplantation, the number of presumably protective antibody levels decreased to 6.5 +/- 1.4 (P = 0.021). One of these patients subsequently developed pneumococcal pneumonia. Cardiac transplant patients are at increased risk of pneumococcal infections. Vaccinating transplant candidates prior to transplantation may provide protection after transplantation.
...
PMID:Increased risk of pneumococcal infections in cardiac transplant recipients. 230 Oct 2
Administration of an elemental diet to rats given methotrexate (MTX), 20 mg/kg intraperitoneally (ip), results in 100% mortality from severe enterocolitis. Previous studies indicate that glutamine (GLN), which is not present in elemental diets, is the preferred oxidative substrate for the gut and may facilitate intestinal recovery after injury. This study investigated the effects of a glutamine-supplemented elemental diet (GLN-ED) on nutritional status, intestinal morphometry, bacterial translocation and survival in this lethal model of intestinal injury. Three experiments were performed. In the first experiment, rats received an intragastric elemental diet supplemented with either 2% GLN or an equivalent amount of glycine (Control). After 4 days animals received either MTX, 20 mg/kg ip, or saline ip and were killed 3 days later. The GLN-ED resulted in significantly decreased weight loss, improved
nitrogen
retention, and increased mucosal weight, protein, and DNA content of the jejunum and colon. In the second experiment rats were assigned to diet as in the first experiment, but all animals received MTX. Control diet animals died within 120 hrs of MTX administration. The GLN-ED group had significantly longer survival time and decreased mortality. In the third experiment animals were assigned to diet and MTX as in the first experiment. Ninety-six hrs later aortic blood cultures revealed enteric
bacteremia
in animals administered MTX. GLN-ED resulted in a significant reduction in the incidence of
bacteremia
. These experiments showed that a GLN-ED significantly improved nutritional status, decreased intestinal injury, decreased bacterial translocation, and resulted in improved survival in a lethal model of enterocolitis.
...
PMID:Effect of a glutamine-supplemented enteral diet on methotrexate-induced enterocolitis. 313 40
Markedly increased synthesis of alpha(2) and beta globulins and alpha(1), alpha(2), and beta glycoglobulins occurs during pneumococcal sepsis in the rat simultaneously with decreased albumin formation, diminished tritiated leucine incorporation into muscle protein, and enhanced excretion of
nitrogen
. This augmented synthesis of specific serum proteins does not become evident until fever and
bacteremia
develop, and it appears to be a fundamental aspect of host response to a proliferating bacterial infection in that it occurs even in rats fed a protein-deficient (6% protein) diet after weaning and before exposure to Diplococcus pneumoniae. Although amino acid catabolism, in general, appears to be increased during infection, tryptophan degradation via the kynurenine pathway, as assessed by measuring diazotizable urinary metabolites, changes little or is, at times, significantly less than in control animals. Coincidentally, functional tryptophan oxygenase activity decreases at 16 hr after exposure. Total tryptophan oxygenase activity, however, is unchanged.
...
PMID:Nitrogen metabolism and protein synthesis during pneumococcal sepsis in rats. 440 82
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>