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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (hyperphagia)
6,116 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The provision of adequate nutrition to hospitalized patients with exceptional caloric requirements has been a problem until the recent advent of intravenous hyperalimentation. With total parenteral nutrition (TPN), the nutritional needs of any patient can be met by infusion. TPN solution is hypertonic, and administration requires central venous cannulation. The subclavian vein is usually chosen as route of access to the superior vena cava. Strict aseptic technique must be used in inserting the catheter and making up and administering the solution. TPN is not without risk. Infection is always a possibility, as are metabolic alterations, such as electrolyte imbalance, fluid overload, osmotic dehydration, and essential fatty acid deficiency.
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PMID:Meeting exceptional nutritional needs. 1. Total parenteral nutrition. 9 43

Twenty-seven patients treated for pancreatic and/or biliary-cutaneous fistulas have been reviewed. Four patients died mainly because of cardiopulmonary and septic complications. Spontaneous sealing of the fistula occurred in 81% of the conservatively treated cases (48% of all cases). All the LO fistulas but only 68% of the HO fistulas treated conservatively sealed spontaneously. Eleven patients were treated surgically. There were three deaths and three failures (reappearance of fistula). All the patients who died had been operated on within three months after the appearance of HO fistulas. There was no mortality among the patients with LO fistulas or among patients operated on at a later stage. We have reached the following conclusions: 1. There is a significant difference in prognosis between low output and high output fistulas. 2. In LO fistulas, there is no need for a surgical intervention aimed to close the fistula unless it persists for at least one year. 3. In HO fistulas, if a corrective operation is necessary, it should be withheld for at least three months whenever possible. 4. Roux-en-Y fistulojejunostomy is considered to be the procedure of choice. 5. Infection and premature colsure of the external part of the fistulous tract should be avoided by insertion of drains and repeated surgical drainage, where necessary. 6. High caloric feeding, elemental diet and intravenous hyperalimentation are very important factors that enhance recovery in the surgically and conservatively treated patients.
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PMID:External biliary-pancreatic fistulas. 40 66

Candida parapsilosis is rarely isolated from blood cultures. Our hospital surveillance detected an increased rate of isolation of C parapsilosis during a four month period. Fourteen postoperative patients receiving intravenous (IV) hyperalimentation and eight burn patients receiving IV albumin were involved. Hectic fever, the major clinical manifestation, was seen in 61% of cases. Therapy in the postoperative patients consisted merely of discontinuing IV catheters and hyperalimentation, while amphotericin B was needed in five of eight burn patients to control persistent fungemia. Epidemiologic analysis identified a source of the organism in the IV-additive preparation room where C parapsilosis was found contaminating a vacuum system. Organisms apparently refluxed into IV bottles when aliquots were removed to accommodate additives. Of 103 patients who received fluids prepared with the contaminated system, 21% became infected with C parapsilosis. Infection surveillance was instrumental in detection and control of the outbreak. Routine guideline should be established to insure the sterility of IV fluids containing additives.
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PMID:Nosocomial outbreak of Candida parapsilosis fungemia related to intravenous infusions. 41 74

Thirty-one patients underwent hemodialysis for renal failure as a complication of major cardiovascular surgery at the University of Minnesota (1968-1973). Only eight patients (26%) survived. A review of the literature shows that since the beginning of hemodialysis the mortality of those patients has not improved. Infection was the overwhelming cause of death. The infections were difficult to diagnosis because they were frequently associated with abdominal abscesses that were almost uniformly overlooked. Several possible ways of improving these patients survival are: 1) the use of early operative interventions of second look type; 2) improved hygenic measures in the care of these patients; 3) more selective antibiotic treatment based on frequent reculturing; and 4) daily short dialysis in association with hyperalimentation.
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PMID:Acute renal insufficiency complicating major cardiovascular surgery. 113 Aug 53

Infections caused by the opportunistic yeast pathogen, Candida albicans, are becoming increasingly important. Superficial Candida infections, particularly those of the mouth and vagina, are very common; for example, candidal vaginitis plaques millions of women worldwide, often proving refractory to treatment. Systemic candidosis is much rarer, but it is an important hazard of modern medical procedures such as transplant surgery, i.v. hyperalimentation, and immunosuppressive therapy. One significant virulence factor of C. albicans is its ability to secrete extracellular acid proteinase. This attribute is shared by C. tropicalis and C. parapsilosis, but not by other less pathogenic Candida species. The enzymes produced by these yeasts are all carboxyl proteinases capable of degrading secretory IgA, the major immunoglobulin of mucous membranes. Some have keratino- or collagenolytic activity. Two secretory proteinases of C. albicans have been purified and characterized; their properties are reviewed. Possible applications of this work to the treatment and diagnosis of candidosis are discussed.
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PMID:Candida proteinases and candidosis. 306 60

To determine risk factors for infection of hyperalimentation catheters, we prospectively studied 169 catheter systems (88 patients) by using a semiquantitative culture technique. Infection occurred in 24 (14%) catheters (16 patients), was inversely proportional to the number of previous catheters inserted by the operator (P less than .02), and was proportional to the interval between admission and catheter insertion (P less than .0005). Catheter replacement over a guidewire was no more likely to be associated with infection than was a de novo percutaneous insertion at another site (P = .6). Using a proportional hazards model, we estimated the risk of infection per day to be 1.3 times greater for a catheter if the patient had been hospitalized 50 days instead of seven days, and 3.8 times greater if the patient had a Swan-Ganz catheter at the time of insertion.
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PMID:Prospective study of catheter replacement and other risk factors for infection of hyperalimentation catheters. 309 37

In summary, the association between malnutrition and infections, including respiratory infections, seems clear from consistent experience in developing nations. Young children are at the greatest risk, both of severe malnutrition and complicating infections. The cell-mediated immune system is the most affected by protein-calorie malnutrition, but antibody responses are also affected and complement levels are low. Infections with organisms handled by cell-mediated immunity would be the most predictable, but the immunoglobulin responses that are important for opsonization of invading microorganisms may also be impaired. The experience in developing nations has been extrapolated to patients in US hospitals, because hospitalized patients often have one or more abnormal nutritional parameters. However, severe malnutrition of the sort found in children in developing nations is uncommon in hospitalized patients, and the effects of malnutrition on host defenses in adults are likely to be less severe than in children. Whether the degrees of malnutrition that have been described in hospitalized patients produce clinically significant effects on antibacterial defenses in the lungs of adults remains uncertain. Despite the intuitive importance of nutritional support, and the repeated observation that nutritional parameters improve with nutritional support, a number of controlled trials have failed to show a clear improvement in patient outcome with aggressive nutritional therapy, including parenteral hyperalimentation. The results of these studies, together with the risks involved in parenteral alimentation have led some to suggest that "the emperor has no clothes," and that aggressive nutritional support is not worthwhile for most patients. The major problem in interpreting the data is the lack of clear clinical endpoints, and this may obscure potentially important responses to nutritional therapy. Nutritional status is only one of many interacting variables that may affect clinical outcome, particularly in patients in critical care units. Survival usually depends on many factors, particularly the status of major organ systems independent of nutrition, so that survival as an endpoint for nutritional studies is likely to be too insensitive. Prospective studies of the incidence and significance of infections, particularly pneumonia, in malnourished patients and the effects of nutritional therapy are lacking. At present, the prudent approach is to treat infections aggressively in malnourished patients, with antibiotics and drainage if necessary, and to provide nutritional supplementation in all patients via the gut as long as possible.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The relationship between malnutrition and lung infections. 311 82

Infection, particularly that involving the respiratory tract, is commonly seen in the patient with ARDS. It can be either an etiologic factor leading to the syndrome or a complicating factor leading to a high likelihood of mortality. Pneumonia develops in up to 70% of individuals with ARDS, and when present, converts the syndrome to its most severe and mortal form. In addition, when systemic injury coexists with any type of infection, ARDS will develop with an increased frequency. Nosocomial pneumonia results when upper and lower respiratory tract defenses fail and these sites are overwhelmed by bacteria. Colonization of the oropharynx and tracheobronchial tree, both of which are common in critically ill patients, precedes the development of pneumonia. In the patient with ARDS, all levels of host antibacterial defenses may be impaired, thus accounting for the high incidence of both colonization and pneumonia. These impairments result from the acute lung injury itself, coexisting systemic illnesses, therapeutic interventions, and acquired malnutrition. Once pneumonia develops in the course of acute lung injury, diagnosis is exceedingly difficult and potentially inaccurate. With proper application of the protected specimen brush, inserted bronchoscopically, diagnostic accuracy may improve. Therapy must be undertaken early and with agents directed at likely pathogens, particularly P. aeruginosa and other gram-negative bacilli. In the future, preventive efforts against pneumonia may be effective for the ARDS patient. Strategies that may be effective include hyperalimentation, judicious use of all pharmacotherapy, active and passive antibacterial vaccines, airway microenvironment manipulation, and the use of aerosolized antibiotics.
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PMID:The interaction of infection and the adult respiratory distress syndrome. 333 58

Infection of DBA/2N male mice with encephalomyocarditis virus resulted in a diabeteslike syndrome characterized by hyperglycemia, glycosuria, hypoinsulinemia, polydipsia, and polyphagia. Blood glucose levels were elevated within 4 days after infection and reached a maximum mean level of 320 mg/100 ml within 12 days. Approximately 60-80% of the animals developed a transient hyperglycemia while 10-15% of the animals remained hyperglycemic for well over 6 mo. The remaining animals failed to become hyperglycemic but many had abnormal glucose tolerance curves. Hyperglycemia was most pronounced when animals were allowed free access to food, and the incidence of byperglycemia was related both to the strain and sex of the animals, with few females developing hyperglycemia. The amount of immunoreactive insulin in the plasma of infected hyperglycemic mice was significantly lower than in appropriate controls, and injection of exogenous insulin resulted in a rapid drop in the blood glucose levels. Despite the fact that certain animals were hyperglycemic for many months, virus could not be recovered from the pancreas after the first 10 days of the infection.
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PMID:Virus-induced diabetes mellitus. I. Hyperglycemia and hypoinsulinemia in mice infected with encephalomyocarditis virus. 434 51

Faecal fistula has been a challenging problem for every surgeon. It develops spontaneously, postoperatively or post-traumatically. Spontaneous faecal fistula develops following peritonitis. Tuberculous peritonitis is an important cause in developing countries. Postoperative faecal fistula develops after enteric perforation or appendicular diseases. Abdominal trauma-blunt, penetrating or perforating, isolated or part of multiple injuries--can lead to faecal fistula. Faecal fistula is more common after emergency surgery, especially in malnourished children. Faecal fistula leads to unnatural losses of fluid and electrolytes and malnutrition. Infection is generally a causative factor or the malnourished child with faecal fistula develops infection very fast. Assessment of the general condition of the child and the level of the fistula is very important in treating the child. Correction of fluid and electrolyte balance, control of infection and supplementation of nutrition is the basis of treatment. Improved parasurgical care and parenteral hyperalimentation has improved the survival rate and the spontaneous healing, reducing the need for surgical intervention.
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PMID:Faecal fistulae in children. 714 39


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