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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (
heart disease
)
34,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The records of all admissions to a 6-bed pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) over a period of 6 years were reviewed. The age, diagnosis, clinical service provided, duration of stay and outcome were recorded. Of the 3025 children admitted, 2092 (69.2%) were males. Neonates constituted 13.1% (400) and infants 57.1% (1727) of total admissions. The duration of stay ranged from 6 hours to 46 days, and 61 patients stayed for longer than 13 days (long-stay patients). The most common cause for admission was septicemia, seen in 459 patients (14.8%); 418 (13.8%) children had congenital
heart disease
, 407 (13.5%) lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) and 261 (8.6%)
meningitis
. The most common conditions necessitating long-stay in the PICU were
meningitis
(20%), Landry-Guillain-Barre syndrome (16.6%), acute renal failure (20%), and septicemia (16.6%). There were 721 deaths giving a mortality of 23.5%. Of these 134 (18.6%) were due to septicemia, 103 (14.2%) due to congenital
heart disease
, 77 (10.6%) due to
meningitis
and 55 (7.6%) due to LRTI. The highest case fatality rate was seen with encephalitis (52.6%), followed by hepatic coma (51.3%), malignancies (43.2%), septicemia (29.1%) and
meningitis
(29.5%). The mortality was lower (9.8%) in long-stay patients than in short-stay patients (24.6%). There was gradual increase in proportion of cases requiring interventions including artificial ventilation (1% to 35%), peritoneal dialysis (1.5% to 11%), insertion of central venous pressure lines (0 to 10%), over the last 6 years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The profile and outcome of patients admitted to a pediatric intensive care unit. 824 86
A prospective study was carried out to determine the aetiology of cerebral abscess in relation to the primary source of infections. Seventy-five patients with cerebral abscess were included in the study in the period January 1985 to December 1988. More than half of the patients studied had single lesions and the overall most common sites were in the frontal and parietal regions. Chronic suppurative otitis media, cyanotic congenital heart diseases and
meningitis
were among the important predisposing conditions in these patients. Approximately 25% of the patients with cerebral abscesses had no documented antecedent infections. Pure cultures were found to be predominant (66.7%) and sterile cultures were obtained from 10 (13.3%) patients. Streptococci were isolated from 23 (30.7%) patients, the commonest species being Streptococcus milleri. Proteus sp, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Pseudomonas putrifaciens and Bacteroides sp were almost exclusively found in cerebral abscesses secondary to chronic suppurative otitis media; these organisms were found in mixed cultures. Streptococcus milleri, Bacteroides sp and Eikenella corrodens were found in pure cultures in patients with cyanotic congenital
heart disease
. In patients with ventriculoperitoneal shunts in-situ, Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis and diphtheroids were common. Anaerobes were found in 15 (20.0%) patients, the majority in mixed cultures. Culture, as well as gas-liquid chromatographic analysis of volatile fatty acids of cerebral pus, was carried out to enhance the detection of the anaerobes. Based on these findings, an antibiotic regimen consisting of penicillin, chloramphenicol and metronidazole is recommended as an initial therapy while awaiting culture and sensitivity results.
...
PMID:Microbiology of cerebral abscess: a four-year study in Malaysia. 850 76
Seventy one patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis who died during the past 5 years (1989 to 1993) were evaluated on their causes of death. Twenty two patients (31%) died directly of tuberculosis, and among them, 18 patients (81%) of 22 patients who died of tuberculosis) had very advanced tuberculosis. The majority of them (64%) were old age over 70 years and were bedridden due mostly to cerebrovascular injuries. The serum level of albumin was low in all 17 patients in whom it was measured. Establishment of diagnosis of tuberculosis was delayed over one month after the onset of symptoms in 59% of patients who died of severe disease. Sixty one percent (11/18) of patients died within the first month after the initiation of chemotherapy and about 90% (16/18) died within 3 months. Two patients died from massive hemoptysis and other patients died of either respiratory failure or tuberculosis
meningitis
. From these observations it was found that very advanced tuberculosis was the major cause of death in patients who died of tuberculosis and that the advanced disease was chiefly caused by the delay on the establishment of diagnosis, and it was most important to detect tuberculosis as early as possible, with regular check up of chest X-ray and frequent examination for AFB (acid-fast bacilli) for tuberculosis suspected patients. On the other hand, the majority of patients (49/71) died of complicating medical problem unrelated to tuberculosis. Seventeen patients died from malignancy (seven lung cancer, four lymphoma, two laryngeal cancer, etc). Ten deaths were the result of bacterial superinfection. Other patients died from respiratory failure due to COPD, arteiosclerotic
heart disease
, or cerebrovascular injuries, etc. Two patients of old age died of hepatic failure possibly caused by adverse reaction of TB chemotherapy. It was found that diseases unrelated to tuberculosis were the cause of death in approximately 70% of patients with active tuberculosis, and it should be emphasized to detect early and to treat these diseases, in particular malignancy. And it is also imperative that the chemotherapy for TB must be instituted very carefully with frequent monitoring of liver function in patients with old age.
...
PMID:[Clinical evaluation on causes of death in patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis]. 868 6
Underlying diseases, complications, clinical findings, and laboratory findings were evaluated in 158 cases of septicaemia admitted to Jikei University Hospital from 1975 to 1994, in order to conjectured factors that prescribe for the prognosis. 50% of the patients had underlying diseases. Malignancy including leukaemia (31 cases, 39.2%) was the most common underlying disease, followed by low birth weight infant (17 cases, 21.5%), aplastic anemia (9 case, 11.4%), and congenital
heart disease
(7 cases, 8.9%). The death rate for patients with underlying disease (27.8%) was significantly greater than the mortality for normal patients with septicaemia (8.9%) (p < 0.05).
Meningitis
(24.7%) was the most common complication, followed by DIC (19.6%), shock (15.2%), and pneumonia (10.8%). The mortality rate of septicaemia complicated by shock was 66.7% (p < 0.01), and that complicated by DIC was 45.2% (p < 0.01). The mortality rate for patients with the clinical findings of respiratory distress, cough, abdominal distention, cyanosis, splenomegaly, or peripheral coldness was more than 40% and significantly greater (p < 0.01). Mortality rate in patients with granulocyte counts of < 4.000/mm3, platelet counts of < 5 x 10(4)/ mm3, total protein of < 5.0 g/dl, or ESR of < 20 mm/hr were significantly greater (p < 0.01) than those in patients with normal laboratory findings. Coincidence rate of blood and stool cultures was 57.9% for E. coli, and 28.6% for Klebsiella sp., and that of blood and throat cultures was more than 30% for Pseudomonas sp., Haemophilus influenzae, and Staphylococcus aureus. In the study of antimicrobial susceptibility for microorganisms isolated, the number of drug resistant S. aureus had increased in the last 10 years.
...
PMID:[Study on septicaemia in infants and children in the past 20 years. Part 2. An analysis of factors that prescribe for the prognosis]. 889 May 45
The disease is named after George H. Whipple who, in 1907, was the first to describe an intestinal "lipodystrophy". Although Whipple's disease is generally recognized as a multisystem chronic granulomatous disease, primarily involving the digestive system, it can also appear as a primary neurological disorder in rare cases. Most often it is manifested with loss of weight, diarrhea, malabsorption, abdominal pain, lymphadenopathy,
cardiopathy
, hyperpigmentation and hypotension. The presence of periodic acid-Schiff (PAS)-positive macrophages in biopsy specimens (not only jejunal) and demonstration of "Whipple's bacilli" visible by electron microscopy, are diagnostic signs of active Whipple's disease. Whipple's disease confined to the CNS is rare. It is rarely found in the differential diagnosis of patients with progressive neurological deterioration. The most common neurological picture includes progressive dementia, external ophalmoplegia, myoclonus, seizures, ataxia, hypothalamic dysfunction (sleep disorders, hyperphagia, polydipsia) and
meningitis
. Oculofacial-skeletal myorhythmia as a movement disorder, associated with Whipple's disease, is reported. Fulminant course of cerebral Whipple's disease is unusual and unfavourable. The confusing and nonspecific clinical appearance is typical for primary CNS involvement. It has recently been suggested that CNS involvement occurs in all cases, although only 10-20% of patients may show it. The CNS is the most common site of disease relapse. The CT scans and MRI of the brain are often normal, but may show cortical/subcortical atrophy, hydrocephalus, focal or intracerebral mass lesions. The cerebrospinal fluid can sometimes contain PAS-positive macrophages. Brain biopsy is suggested as a diagnostic method in cases of high suspicion of CNS Whipple's disease. However, the lesions are frequently inaccessible and false negative. Without extended antibiotic therapy, the course of Whipple's disease is lethal. Now, the prognosis is good, although the optimal antimicrobial regimen is not clearly established. Initial parenteral therapy (tetracycline, penicilline, streptomycine, chloramphenicol, ampicilline) and peroral long-term treatment with trimetoprime-sulphametoxasole, are recommended. As CNS relapse of Whipple's disease may occur after several years, long-term treatment should include antibiotics that are able to cross the blood-brain barrier. The CNS relapse, in contrast to the systemic ones, is resistant to the treatment. Appropriate therapy instituted earlier in the course of the disease is associated with a better neurological outcome. Early recognition can be critical in Whipple's disease because of irreversible neurological sequelae seen later in the course of this potentially treatable condition. In cases with high clinical suspicion in which Whipple's disease cannot be diagnosed with procedures such as jejunal biopsy, antibiotic therapy is recommended. Recovery of an established neurological deficit may rarely occur. Longterm follow-up studies would help to identify the optimal antibiotic regimen and duration of treatment.
...
PMID:[Neurologic disorders in Whipple's disease]. 910 28
Penicillin-resistant pneumococcal infections have been reported worldwide, but rarely reported in Taiwan. From 1990 to 1995, the rate of penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae (PRSP) infections in our hospital increased from less than 10% during the first 2 years (1990-91) to 45% during the last 2 years (1994-95). From 1990 to 1995, twenty-four patients with systemic pneumococcal infections were diagnosed in the Department of Pediatrics at Mackay Memorial Hospital. Pneumococci were isolated from blood in 20 patients, cerebrospinal fluid in 12 patients, joint fluid in one patient and pleural effusion in one patient. Four patients had underlying diseases, including ileal atresia, Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome, congenital
heart disease
, and perilymph fistula. Of the 24 isolates of S. pneumoniae, 17 (70.8%) were intermediately penicillin resistant (minimum inhibitory concentrations between 0.1 and 1.0 microgram/mL), and 7 (29.2%) were highly resistant (minimum inhibitory concentrations > 1.0 microgram/ml). Fourteen patients recovered completely, two had minor sequelae, two had major sequelae, and six died. Four of the 12 patients with
meningitis
died. In this study, both the rate of PRSP as well as the mortality of patients with PRSP
meningitis
were high, as compared to previous reports. To reduce the mortality and morbidity of systemic pneumococcal infections, the oxacillin disc diffusion test is important in addition to appropriate antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Penicillin-resistant pneumococcal infections in children. 921 63
The authors report a case and treatment of multiple brain abscesses located in the cerebrum and cerebellum combined with subdural empyema. In conjunction with the case report, the authors review the literature on the pathogenesis of brain abscesses and discuss therapeutic strategies concerning the topic. In the case presented, the primary infection persisted in the lung causing subclinical bronchitis. The hemoculture showed evidence of Streptococcus mitis infection. Although the etiological role of this bacterium in
meningitis
is known, it rarely causes bacterial meningitis without underlying predisposing factors. In their case, the patient was free of the most common predisposing factors such as congenital
heart disease
or immunodeficiency. Following the 2 month period of latency, a rapid onset of the symptoms of intracranial inflammation could be observed: fever, headache, meningeal symptoms, focal neurological symptoms and coma. They were not able to identify any bacteria in the cerebrospinal fluid; the Streptocossus mitis could be cultivated only from the haemoculture. The cytological analysis of the cerebrospinal fluid showed typical signs of bacterial infection and the cranial Computed Tomography revealed multiple cerebral abscesses. Neurosurgical intervention was not recommended because of the number, localization and size of the focal lesions. The therapy consisted of intravenous administration of 24 x 10(6) IU/die Penicillin and 4 g/die ceftriaxon. For supportive therapy, Mannitol B, 3 mg/die clonazepam and 300 mg/die phenytoin were administered. Corticosteroids were not used during the course of therapy. Two years later the 55 year old female is symptom free and doing well.
...
PMID:[Non-invasive management of multiple brain abscesses. Case report and review of the literature]. 1053 93
Infections are thought to be important in the pathogenesis of many heart diseases. Coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) has been linked to chronic dilated cardiomyopathy, a common cause of progressive
heart disease
, heart failure and sudden death. We show here that the sarcoma (Src) family kinase Lck (p56lck) is required for efficient CVB3 replication in T-cell lines and for viral replication and persistence in vivo. Whereas infection of wild-type mice with human pathogenic CVB3 caused acute and very severe myocarditis,
meningitis
, hepatitis, pancreatitis and dilated cardiomyopathy, mice lacking the p56lck gene were completely protected from CVB3-induced acute pathogenicity and chronic
heart disease
. These data identify a previously unknown function of Src family kinases and indicate that p56lck is the essential host factor that controls the replication and pathogenicity of CVB3.
...
PMID:The tyrosine kinase p56lck is essential in coxsackievirus B3-mediated heart disease. 1074 50
Central nervous system infections in adolescents range from the diffuse cerebritis of encephalitis to the regional inflammation of
meningitis
, and very focal disease of brain abscess. Clinical presentations reflect this wide spectrum, with encephalitis primarily characterized by altered mental status,
meningitis
by fever, headache, and neck stiffness, and brain abscess manifesting localizing findings. Encephalitis and viral meningitis are frequently caused by the seasonal enteroviruses and arboviruses, while most adolescent bacterial meningitis is due to Neisseria meningitidis and Streptococcus pneumoniae. The microbiology of brain abscess reflects underlying host risk factors. Gram-positive cocci are seen in patients with congenital
heart disease
, while respiratory flora including anaerobes are associated with sinus or otic disease. Lumbar puncture to characterize and culture the CSF remains the optimal test for the diagnosis and management of encephalitis and
meningitis
, while CT-guided needle biopsy may be both diagnostic and therapeutic for brain abscesses. New diagnostic tests include the use of PCR. A variety of safe and effective treatment regimens exists for most bacterial infections as well as for some herpesvirus infections. New vaccines are under study to further control bacterial meningitis.
...
PMID:Serious infections of the central nervous system: encephalitis, meningitis, and brain abscess. 1091 31
To better define the overall characteristics and risk factors for dying of adult pneumococcal endocarditis (PE) focusing on the echocardiographic diagnosis, the impact of surgery, and emergence of penicillin resistance, the medical and microbiologic charts of adult PE cases observed between 1991 and 1998 in university and general hospitals were reviewed through a nationwide retrospective study in France. Thirty cases of PE (22 men, 8 women; median age, 53 yr; range, 27-87 yr) were collected and validated. Twenty patients (66.7%) had no known predisposing
cardiopathy
; 4 had a bioprosthetic valve. The primary focus of infection was pneumonia in 10 (33.3%), and
meningitis
was noted in 12 (40.0%). Half the patients suffered from chronic alcoholism. Echocardiography detected vegetation(s) in 29 cases (96.7%), valvular perforation in 6 (20.0%), and/or valve ring abscess in 4 (13.3%). The most frequent complications were congestive heart failure (n = 19), large arterial emboli (n = 8), and focal abscesses (n = 7). Five strains were penicillin-resistant. Twenty (66.7%) patients underwent valve replacement, 12 of them during the first month. The overall mortality rate was 24.1%. According to a multivariate analysis, the risk factors independently associated with dying were age > or = 65 yr and septic shock, while cardiac surgery was protective (p < 0.01). In conclusion, PE is usually fulminant and causes severe valve damage and embolic complications; its short-term prognosis might be improved by early valve replacement.
...
PMID:Streptococcus pneumoniae endocarditis in adults. A multicenter study in France in the era of penicillin resistance (1991-1998). The Pneumococcal Endocarditis Study Group. 1103 81
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