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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (
endocarditis
)
15,629
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pulmonary arterial hypertension develops in acute respiratory failure and mostly an enhanced PADd-PCWP gradient has an important effect on the outcome of that complication. Considering that this critical state of septic burned patients may last for weeks, the long-term direct monitoring of pulmonary arterial blood pressure with indwelling Swan-Ganz catheter is impossible because of the high risk of
endocarditis
. Therefore, the aim of this study was to elaborate a noninvasive method to estimate the pulmonary arterial hypertension. Determination of cardiac index and pulmonary arterial blood pressure was carried out with Swan-Ganz catheter, P32 Statham transducer, cardiac output computers (Gould IM 1000, Marquette 7010). Extended systolic time interval measurements (with Medicor 661 polygraph completed by PC program package) were performed simultaneously in 7 burned patients (av. age 38.7 ys, means of TBS 38%) with acute respiratory failure at 38 occasions. The values of cardiac indices with the two methods were practically the same CI t = 3.4 +/- 1.21 1/min/m2 CI s = 3.1 +/- 1.10 1/min/m2; regression equation: CI s = 0.874 CIt + 0.135, r = 0.98, n = 38. Close correlations have been found between PAPm and PO2/FiO2 (r = 0.75), as well as between
PAP
values and some noninvasively measured hemodynamic data. Using these interrelations: 1) regression equations for PAPs., PAPm, PAPd, PCWP, PVRI were elaborated (r values: 0.855, 0.869, 0.681, 0.644, 0.817 respectively); 2) discriminant analysis with noninvasive parameters correctly classified the cases at critical PAPd-PCWP gradient (greater than 4 mm/Hg) in 84%. These results suggest that a continuous noninvasive hemodynamic and blood gas monitoring completed with a periodic bedside computer analysis of the PC-processed data for calculation of the pulmonary arterial pressure may be enough for the therapy during the long-term critical periods.
...
PMID:Noninvasive estimation of pulmonary arterial blood pressure in burned patients with acute respiratory failure. 176 49
Left ventricular (LV) function in 45 patients with native aortic valve infective
endocarditis
was studied in order to identify high surgical risk patients and the pattern of irreversible myocardial damage. LV function was studied by M-mode and 2D-echocardiography (LV volumes; ejection fraction, EF; peak systolic pressure to end-systolic volume ratio (
PAP
/ESV) as an index of myocardial contractility; LV mean systolic wall stress as an index of LV afterload and the radius to thickness ratio (R/Th). Thirteen patients underwent aortic valve replacement with an overall operative mortality of 15%. The cause of death was intractable heart failure. Different EF vs stress relationships could be described for different level of myocardial contractility: patients with intractable heart failure had a severely depressed myocardial contractility so that for a given level of LV stress, EF was significantly lower. High operative risk patients were identified by the
PAP
/ESV vs R/Th relation. All surgical deaths occurred in patients with a severely depressed myocardial contractility (
PAP
/ESV less than 2) and inadequate hypertrophy (R/Th greater than 4). Reversal of LV dysfunction in patients with moderately depressed myocardial contractility depended on the pattern of LV hypertrophy; a normal post-operative EF was achieved only in patients with adequate hypertrophy (R/Th less than 4).
...
PMID:[Quantitative echocardiographic study of the left ventricular function in acute aortic infective endocarditis]. 321 22
The communities of beneficial bacteria that live in our intestines, the gut microbiome, are important for the development and function of the immune system. Bacteroides species make up a significant fraction of the human gut microbiome, and can be probiotic and pathogenic, depending upon various genetic and environmental factors. These can cause disease conditions such as intra-abdominal sepsis, appendicitis, bacteremia,
endocarditis
, pericarditis, skin infections, brain abscesses and meningitis. In this study, we identify the transport systems and predict their substrates within seven Bacteroides species, all shown to be probiotic; however, four of them (B. thetaiotaomicron, B. vulgatus, B. ovatus, B. fragilis) can be pathogenic (probiotic and pathogenic;
PAP
), while B. cellulosilyticus, B. salanitronis and B. dorei are believed to play only probiotic roles (only probiotic; OP). The transport system characteristics of the four
PAP
and three OP strains were identified and tabulated, and results were compared among the seven strains, and with E. coli and Salmonella strains. The Bacteroides strains studied contain similarities and differences in the numbers and types of transport proteins tabulated, but both OP and
PAP
strains contain similar outer membrane carbohydrate receptors, pore-forming toxins and protein secretion systems, the similarities were noteworthy, but these Bacteroides strains showed striking differences with probiotic and pathogenic enteric bacteria, particularly with respect to their high affinity outer membrane receptors and auxiliary proteins involved in complex carbohydrate utilization. The results reveal striking similarities between the
PAP
and OP species of Bacteroides, and suggest that OP species may possess currently unrecognized pathogenic potential.
...
PMID:Comparative genomics of transport proteins in seven Bacteroides species. 3051 69