Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0012739 (disseminated intravascular coagulation)
8,673 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although bacteremia and sepsis are infrequently reported complications of red blood cell (RBC) transfusion, receipt of transfused blood contaminated with bacterial pathogens may result in sepsis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and death. Such pathogens have included Yersinia enterocolitica and Pseudomonas fluorescens. From November 1985 through February 1991, a total of 11 cases of sepsis associated with receipt of transfused Y. enterocolitica-contaminated RBCs were reported in the United States. This report describes an additional 10 cases of Y. enterocolitica sepsis reported to CDC during March 1991-November 1996 in patients who received transfusions with contaminated RBCs and describes the development of a study to detect bacteria-associated reactions to transfusion of RBCs and other blood components.
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PMID:Red blood cell transfusions contaminated with Yersinia enterocolitica--United States, 1991-1996, and initiation of a national study to detect bacteria-associated transfusion reactions. 922 23

Purpura fulminans is classically defined by ecchymotic skin lesions, fever, and hypotension. The majority of cases occur in association with bacterial sepsis, and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) is usually present. Prompted by our experience with a patient with pneumococcal sepsis and purpura fulminans in whom hypotension was never observed, we evaluated the important parameters of sepsis in reports of this syndrome. 42 additional cases of pneumococcal bacteremia and purpura fulminans were identified. Hypotension was present in only 51%. Although DIC was present in 85% of patients, hypofibrinogenemia was documented in only 26%. By contrast, both hypotension and hypofibrinogenemia are present in the vast majority of patients described with purpura fulminans in association with meningococcal sepsis. These data confirm that hypotension is not a necessary feature of the syndrome of purpura fulminans associated with pneumococcal sepsis and suggest further that qualitative or quantitative differences exist in the DIC cascade of pneumococcal vs meningococcal sepsis.
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PMID:Purpura fulminans in pneumococcal sepsis: case report and review. 943 36

A total of 140 pathoanatomic conclusions and files collected by the author are analyzed. Morphological signs of the DIC syndrome were detected in 55% of patients who died. In 42% of lethal outcomes this syndrome was the final direct cause of death after such conditions as terminal stage of cancer, sepsis, extensive myocardial infarction, mechanical jaundice, uremia, bacteremia, etc. In 13% of autopsies fatal intravascular coagulation was a complication of the intervention or hemorrhage which was arrested before death. The DIC syndrome is diagnosed during autopsy due to a complex of peculiar changes in the viscera which are called "shock" in such cases. The signs of a shock liver are as follows: a characteristic red net pattern of the sliced surface and histological phenomena related to blocking of the sinusoidal bloodflow and lobular ischemia: abnormal hepatocyte complexes, fragmentation of liver bulks, and necrosis of the central lobules.
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PMID:[Morphological diagnosis of DIC syndrome. Shock liver]. 951 Dec 43

The clinical features, essential laboratory findings, management, and outcome of all 23 cases of septic arthritis caused by different serogroups of beta-hemolytic streptococcus (BHS) seen at the Stanford Medical Center, Stanford, CA, from July 1, 1985, through October 31, 1996, were reviewed and compared to those found in the literature. Group A streptococci (GAS) accounted for 9 (40%) of our cases; group B (GBS), for 7 (30%); and Group G (GGS), for 7 (30%). No cases were caused by Group C (GCS) or F (GFS) during this period. During the same period, GAS accounted for 66 (33%) of 200 cases of bacteremia due to BHS, GBS, for 98 (49%); GCS, for 12 (6%); GFS, for 4 (2%); and GGS, for 20 (10%). A review of potential risk factors revealed that, with the exception of GGS, male and female patients were almost equally distributed among each of the serogroups. Patients aged 50 years and older comprised 56%-77% of each group. Associated conditions and risk factors were present among most patients (19/23, 83%); autoimmune diseases and a chronic skin wound or trauma were notably present among patients with GAS, while diabetes mellitus and malignancy were more common among patients with GBS. Infected prosthetic implants were present in 7 patients, including 4/7 patients with GGS. All patients had positive cultures of synovial fluid, and 11/23 (49%) had positive blood cultures (GAS, 5/9; GBS, 6/7; and GGS, 0/7). The clinical presentation and hospital course of patients infected with the different serogroups varied. Patients infected with GAS had the most severe disease and those with GGS the least severe. Necrotizing fascitis, shock, DIC, and admission to the intensive care unit were found only among patients infected with GAS. Despite aggressive management with antimicrobial therapy and surgery, 4/23 patients died (3 patients with GAS; 1 with GBS). The isolates from our patients were not available for study; investigations by others of the biology of BHS suggest that the production of 1 or more of the streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxins by isolates of GAS may account for the differences in the severity of disease among our patients with septic arthritis caused by different serogroups of BHS. Although septic arthritis due to BHS is uncommon, such patients provide a valuable model to study features of the host-parasite interaction that may contribute to the observed differences in severity of disease.
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PMID:Bacterial arthritis due to beta-hemolytic streptococci of serogroups A, B, C, F, and G. Analysis of 23 cases and a review of the literature. 955 3

The causative organisms, clinical manifestations, factors influencing prognosis, and other epidemiological characteristics of 81 episodes of bacteremia due to gram-negative organisms, in non-neutropenic patients, were studied retrospectively during a 3-year period (1992-1994) at the Department of Internal Medicine of the University Hospital of Heraklion, Crete, Greece. The gram-negative bacteremia incidence was 2% and the overall mortality 12%. All 81 patients had fever; Escherichia coli was the most frequent organism isolated (from 47 patients--58%) and was associated with shock (9/47), disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) (8/47), anuria (5/47), adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) (3/47), and pneumonia (1/47). Other less frequent gram-negative microorganisms were Klebsiella spp. (ten patients; 12%), Pseudomonas spp. (7; 7%), Salmonella spp. (5; 6%), Enterobacter spp. (5; 6%), Proteus spp. (3; 3.4%), Stenotrophomonas spp. (3; 3.4%), and Acinetobacter spp. (1; 1.2%). ARDS. shock, DIC, anuria, presence of central venous catheter, urinary catheter, unknown origin of infection and inappropriate treatment were significantly associated with a higher death rate. Early initiation of appropriate therapy was the most important intervention that favorably affected the outcome of gram-negative bacteremias in this patient population.
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PMID:Gram-negative bacteremia in non-neutropenic patients: a 3-year review. 964 6

Meningococcal disease is an infection caused by Neisseria meningitidis, a gram-negative diplococcus that is the leading cause of bacterial meningitis in children and young adults in the United States, with an estimated 2,600 cases reported each year. N. meningitidis infection rates are highest in children 3 to 12 months of age. Four distinct clinical situations are associated with meningococcal infection. The most common is asymptomatic nasopharyngeal colonization. Benign bacteremia is discovered in the absence of classical clinical findings of meningococcemia, but blood cultures are positive for N. meningitidis. Meningitis, the most common pathologic presentation, is associated with fever, headache, and nuchal rigidity. The mortality rate is about 5% in children and 10% to 15% in adults. Meningococcemia, the most severe form of infection, may involve petechial rash, hypotension, and disseminated intravascular coagulation. It is a fulminant condition that can, if untreated, progress from initial symptoms to coma and death in 12 to 48 hours. Spread of these endemic cases can be controlled by administering prophylactic antibiotics to close contacts of patients.
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PMID:Meningococcal disease: recognition, treatment, and prevention. 971

Septic adrenal hemorrhage is classically caused by meningococcemia. An autopsied case is presented of a 45-year-old man with adrenal hemorrhage due to Klebsiella oxytoca bacteremia following placement of a central venous catheter. He died 5 hours after developing disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). The bacterial entry site may have been the catheter. The cause of death was considered to be pulmonary edema due to bacteremia rather than adrenal insufficiency due to hemorrhage. Septic adrenal hemorrhage should be recognized as a subtype of sepsis rather than adrenal insufficiency, and may be caused in conditions of severe sepsis with DIC, independent of the microorganic variety.
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PMID:Adrenal hemorrhage associated with Klebsiella oxytoca bacteremia. 986 68

At Asama General Hospital, we experienced six cases of urosepsis with septic shock during a period of five years between 1989 and 1993. All six patients, whose average age was 74 years old, recovered. In four patients, the condition was caused by obstructive uropathy. The remaining two cases were caused by renal inflammatory disease, which was complicated by diabetes mellitus. One of them was renal abscess with renal papillary necrosis, and the other was emphysematous pyelonephritis. The patients, who exhibited symptoms such as gram-negative bacteremia, severe hypotension, tachycardia, decrease of urine volume and mental disturbance, were diagnosed with urosepsis with septic shock. In all cases, symptoms such as a high fever of over 39 degrees C, hypoxemia and thrombocytopenia were observed. Renal dysfunction was found in 67%, and both liver dysfunction and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) were found in 50% of the cases. Since no patients suffered from adult respiratory distress syndrome, a high survival rate was apparent. Anti-shock therapy and anti-coagulation therapy were ineffective for the patients who had septic shock due to urinary tract obstruction. Urinary tract drainage was required to treat the latter patients. Nephrectomy could not be avoided in renal parenchymatous inflammatory disease. In the future, what might be essential in therapeutics against urosepsis with septic shock, particularly to avoid nephrectomy, are the treatments such as immunotherapy against endotoxins and their mediators, and hemoperfusion for the removal of endotoxins.
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PMID:[Clinical study on 6 cases of urosepsis associated with septic shock]. 989 24

Clinical trials have shown that the murine monoclonal antibody E5 and the human hybrid monoclonal antibody HA-1A increase survival of patients with gram-negative sepsis. However, significant reduction in mortality associated with E5's use was limited to patients who had not progressed to refractory shock. Patients treated with E5 compared to placebo receivers were also significantly more likely to experience resolution of organ failures. Significant reductions in morbidity and mortality associated with HA-1A's use were limited to patients with gram-negative bacteremia, and occurred even in patients with shock. Treatment with HA-1A also had a significant positive effect on resolution of the major complications of sepsis (shock, disseminated intravascular coagulation, acute renal failure, acute hepatic failure, or adult respiratory distress syndrome) in patients with documented gram-negative bacteremia. Both products appear to be safe, with generally mild, transient, and clinically insignificant adverse effects reported.
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PMID:Comparison of the efficacy, safety, and therapeutic usage of HA-1A and E5 in the treatment of gram-negative sepsis. 1011 16

A 21-year-old woman suffered heatstroke and developed diarrhea while trekking across south Texas. The heatstroke was complicated by seizures, rhabdomyolysis, pneumonia, renal failure, and disseminated intravascular coagulation. The patient's stool and blood cultures grew Campylobacter jejuni. The patient subsequently developed paranasal and gastrointestinal zygomycosis and required surgical debridement and a prolonged course of amphotericin B. The zygomycete cultured was Rhizopus schipperae. This is only the second isolate of R. schipperae that has been described. R. schipperae is characterized by the production of clusters of up to 10 sporangiophores arising from simple but well-developed rhizoids. These asexual reproductive propagules are produced on Czapek Dox agar but are absent on routine mycology media, where only chlamydospores are observed. Despite multiorgan failure, bacteremia, and disseminated zygomycosis, the patient survived and had a good neurological outcome. Heatstroke has not been previously described as a risk factor for the development of disseminated zygomycosis.
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PMID:Disseminated zygomycosis due to Rhizopus schipperae after heatstroke. 1040 17


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