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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The distribution of normal cell counts (the reference range) has been determined previously for circulating neutrophils in infants from birth to 28 days of age. We have determined the reference ranges for the absolute peripheral blood lymphocyte, monocyte, and eosinophil counts obtained from 393 infants in this same cohort. Furthermore, white blood cell counts were obtained from three groups of infants with perinatal complications previously shown to be associated with abnormal neutrophil values (ABO incompatibility, n = 82; maternal hypertension, n = 68; neonatal sepsis, n = 140) and compared with the derived reference ranges; significant alterations in the distribution of cell counts were found in each of these groups at different times. Our data provide reference ranges for lymphocyte, monocyte, and eosinophil counts in the neonatal period and evidence of the effect of specific perinatal events on these cell counts.
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PMID:Neonatal blood cell count in health and disease. II. Values for lymphocytes, monocytes, and eosinophils. 403 39

Pulmonary microvascular injury during sepsis after injury appears to be amplified with plasma fibronectin deficiency, but the degree of injury relative to the extent of sepsis has not been defined. We evaluated pulmonary vascular permeability in sheep as influenced by various levels of postoperative Pseudomonas sepsis during a period of plasma fibronectin deficiency. The hemodynamic response to Pseudomonas was very similar regardless of the intensity of septic challenge and characterized by systemic arterial hypotension, decreased cardiac output, and pulmonary arterial hypertension. In contrast, increased pulmonary microvascular permeability was observed with increments in the bacterial challenge. Thus, lung protein clearance (LPC) or so called pulmonary transvascular protein clearance (TPC) used as an index of lung vascular permeability was 9.1 +/- 1.9 ml/hr, 15.1 +/- 1.7 ml/hr, and 19.3 +/- 3.0 ml/hr 2 hr after low (3 X 10(9) i.v.; 1 X 10(10) i.p.), medium (3 X 10(9) i.v.; 3 X 10(10) i.p.), and high (5 X 10(9) i.v.; 5 X 10(10) i.p.) dose Pseudomonas challenges, respectively. Thus, the extent of the altered pulmonary microvascular integrity in sheep during sepsis after surgery in the presence of fibronectin deficiency is dependent on the degree of bacterial sepsis. In addition, infusion of cryoprecipitate was an effective means of reversing the plasma fibronectin deficiency. Accordingly, this may be used as a model to investigate the mechanism of altered lung fluid balance during postoperative septic shock and the effect of fibronectin on this response.
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PMID:Lung fluid and protein flux during postoperative sepsis. 405 99

Ninety patients at the Wilmington Medical Center were enrolled in a comparative study to evaluate the efficacy and toxicity of ticarcillin plus clavulanic acid in the treatment of a variety of infections. Forty-seven women with obstetric or gynecologic infections were randomly assigned to receive ticarcillin plus clavulanic acid or cefoxitin. Forty-three patients with gram-negative septicemia or lower respiratory tract infection were given ticarcillin plus clavulanic acid or tobramycin plus piperacillin in a randomized fashion. Of the 47 women with obstetric or gynecologic infections, 23 were randomly assigned to receive ticarcillin plus clavulanic acid, and 24 were randomly assigned to receive cefoxitin. Several patients in each group had underlying diseases such as diabetes, obesity, and hypertension. Of the 27 pathogens isolated in the group receiving ticarcillin plus clavulanic acid, 26 (96 percent) were eradicated, including all three ticarcillin-resistant pathogens. In the cefoxitin-treated group, 31 of the 33 (94 percent) pathogens were eliminated, including all four ticarcillin-resistant organisms. Three reinfections or superinfections occurred, and cefoxitin therapy failed to eliminate an enterococcus isolate from the endometrium in one patient. The clinical response in both treatment groups was excellent. Either cure or clinical improvement was achieved for all 18 sites of infection in the ticarcillin plus clavulanic acid-treated group and for all 22 sites in the cefoxitin-treated group. There were no systemic drug reactions in either treatment group. In one patient in the cefoxitin-treated group, local phlebitis developed at the infusion site. This reaction responded to local therapy. There were no local reactions among the patients receiving ticarcillin plus clavulanic acid. Of the 43 patients with gram-negative septicemia or lower respiratory tract infection, 21 were randomly assigned to receive ticarcillin plus clavulanic acid and 22 were assigned to receive tobramycin plus piperacillin. Thirty-six patients had gram-negative sepsis, and seven patients had lower respiratory tract infection. Nine of the 36 patients suspected of having gram-negative sepsis were not evaluable because no pathogen was isolated prior to treatment. Twenty-two of the 27 patients treated for septicemia had good clinical and microbiologic responses. Three of the seven patients with pneumonia were not evaluable. Of the four evaluable patients, two had pneumococcus pneumonia; one was treated with tobramycin plus piperacillin and one with ticarcillin plus clavulanic acid. In both instances, the clinical and bacteriologic responses were considered good.
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PMID:Treatment of infections in hospitalized patients with ticarcillin plus clavulanic acid. A comparative study. 407 86

Mesoblastic nephroma is a distinctive pathologic renal tumor with unique clinical, therapeutic, and prognostic patterns. This report reviews 51 patients (2.8% of 1905 patients submitted to NWTS with renal tumors) with this diagnosis from the NWTS contrasting this disease entity with Wilms' tumor. There were 33 males and 18 females, predominantly term babies born after uncomplicated pregnancies. The mean age at tumor excision was 3.44 +/- 0.6 mo (one child 9 yr). A palpable mass was the predominant presentation in 48 patients and in addition hematuria (9), hypertension (2), vomiting (3), and jaundice (1) were noteworthy. Diagnostic studies included IVP (49 positive, 2 negative) and ultrasound (15 positive, 1 negative). Adequate operative excision was achieved in 43 of 51 patients while 8 children had local extension and 10 had tumor spillage. Operation alone (23), predominantly since 1978, surgery plus chemotherapy (24), prior to 1978, and surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation therapy (4), prior to 1976, were the modes of therapy. The follow-up ranges from 4 mo to 11.5 yr. Survival was excellent; 50 patients survive (98%), only 1 dying of sepsis. These data suggest that mesoblastic nephroma contrasts with Wilms' tumor in that it occurs in a younger age group, has a benign biologic behavior, and a more favorable outcome. Aggressive multimodal treatment though utilized in the early years of the study is not essential to achieve this outcome.
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PMID:Therapy and outcome in 51 children with mesoblastic nephroma: a report of the National Wilms' Tumor Study. 629 97

Hypertension, phosphate retention, hyperfiltration hyalinosis and the natural course of the underlying are well known factors leading to progression of chronic renal failure. Acute bacterial interstitial nephritis occurring in a previously diseased kidney, although well documented in experimental animals, has not been shown to aggravate chronic renal failure in man. We report on 3 cases of acute suppurative interstitial nephritis, due to E. coli urinary infection complicated by septicemia. All had rapid aggravation of previously mild renal failure secondary to chronic interstitial nephritis. Sepsis originated from the urinary tract which in 2 instances had been temporarily obstructed. Renal biopsy disclosed a diffuse interstitial infiltrate containing numerous polymorphonuclear leukocytes. This was superimposed on chronic tubular and interstitial lesions. In 1 case there were glomerular lesions with crescents and mesangial C3 deposits. A 2nd biopsy performed in 2 cases was of prognostic interest. In one case it showed active lesions and the necessity of continuing the treatment and in the other a satisfactory healing allowing cessation of therapy. Treatment was guided by antibiograms, the clinical and urinary signs of activity, renal biopsy findings and antibiotics known to be concentrated in renal tissue. The duration of treatment seemed important for the regression of acute renal lesions. Hematogenous bacterial interstitial nephritis should be considered as a possible cause of aggravation in chronic renal failure.
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PMID:[Acute hematogenic interstitial nephritis of urinary origin: an unrecognized factor in the exacerbation of chronic kidney failure]. 634 71

Renal venous thrombosis, a clotting process that originates in the venous radicles and progresses into the main renal vein and vena cava, predominantly affects newborn infants. It may be manifest in one or both kidneys and follow maternal diabetes, diarrhea and dehydration, congenital heart disease, acute blood loss, sepsis, asphyxia, and shock. The most common signs include gross hematuria, enlarged palpable kidneys, and thrombocytopenia. Evaluation should include ultrasonography of the kidneys (demonstrating renal enlargement with disruption of the normal echo pattern), computed tomography, and renal isotope scanning. The initial treatment is supportive. Surgical intervention is not indicated in the acute phase except in the rare instance of bilateral disease. Anticoagulant therapy is still controversial. Late sequelae include impairment of renal function, shrunken hypoplastic kidney, arterial hypertension, and tubular defects.
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PMID:Renal venous thrombosis in children: changes in management. 635 1

This is a report about 4 patients with aneurysms of the superior mesenteric artery of arteriosclerotic, mycotic and probably congenital etiology together with a review of the literature as to the etiology, diagnostic possibilities and therapy. Arteriography is the method of choice even though a diagnosis may be possible by sonography or CT in special cases. Even though an aneurysm of the superior mesenteric artery is rare, it has to be considered in the differential diagnosis of persisting abdominal problems of unknown origin. This is especially true for patients with a predisposing history such as previous or existing endocarditis, sepsis, arteriosclerosis and hypertension. Because of the possibility of rupture followed by life threatening bleeding an adequate diagnostic step such as arteriography has to be considered finally.
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PMID:[Aneurysm of the superior mesenteric artery. Its diagnosis and clinical significance]. 643 18

During the past five years 75 patients aged 90 years or more had 85 major surgical procedures at the Metropolitan Nashville General and Vanderbilt University hospitals. The most common operation was exploratory laparotomy. The second was lower extremity amputation for peripheral vascular disease and/or gangrene. Fifty-seven percent had general endotracheal anesthesia. Associated medical problems were common, and included congestive heart failure (24%), hypertension (21%), diabetes mellitus (13%), chronic arrhythmias (9%), history of myocardial infarction (8%), and history of cerebrovascular accident (5%). Eleven patients (13.4%), six of whom had general anesthesia, died after operation. Of these, two had postoperative pneumonia, two did not recover from bowel perforation and peritonitis, one had a postoperative myocardial infarction, another had a cerebrovascular accident, and one had sepsis. One patient's sudden death was likely due to myocardial infarction or pulmonary embolus. The other three deaths occurred in patients with extensive carcinomas (gallbladder carcinoma in one and widely metastatic carcinoma of unknown origin in two). These three patients died of the disease for which they were operated upon when the operation failed to alter its course. When surgical procedures are necessary to prolong and/or improve the quality of life in elderly patients, these procedures may be done in most cases with acceptable results.
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PMID:Surgical procedures in patients aged 90 years and older. 649 54

To determine the usefulness of neutrophil values in diagnosing neonatal sepsis among infants at risk of neutropenia, we evaluated the pattern of sequential absolute total and immature neutrophil counts and the immature to total neutrophil (I:T) proportion over the first 5 days of life in infants with sepsis (n = 13), asphyxia neonatorum (n = 12), or delivered of mothers with pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH) (n = 20), comparing values to references ranges previously reported by us. Neutropenia was initially present in 67% and 50% of infants with asphyxia and those whose mothers had PIH, respectively, and persisted through the first 3 postnatal days. In contrast, infants with sepsis were less likely to be neutropenic initially (38%), and neutropenia did not persist after 36 hours of age. Elevated values for the total immature neutrophil count and I:T proportion were much more likely to occur in infants with sepsis (46% and 61%, respectively) than in infants of mothers with PIH (4% and 12%) or those with asphyxia (13% and 22%). The importance of considering the perinatal history as well as the differential neutrophil count in the evaluation of neonatal neutropenia is demonstrated.
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PMID:Neutropenia in high-risk neonates. 650 53

In the present study we report the renal pathological findings from autopsy material along with relevant clinical data on 21 spinal cord injury patients with end-stage renal disease (SCI-ESRD) treated with maintenance haemodialysis. These data are compared with the relevant clinical and post-mortem findings on 43 ambulatory dialysis patients who expired during the same time period. The SCI-ESRD patients exhibited markedly different clinical and renal histopathological data when compared to the ambulatory--ESRD group. Chronic pyelonephritis and amyloidosis dominated the findings and were the major causes of renal insufficiency. Acute pyelonephritis, papillary necrosis, calculous disease, pyonephrosis and perinephric abscess formation were also more frequently present in the SCI-ESRD patients. Hypertension and nephrosclerosis, which were common findings in the ambulatory--ESRD patients were comparatively rare in the SCI-ESRD patients. In addition, the incidence of acquired cystic disease (ACD) was considerably less in the SCI-ESRD group. Although the reasons for these findings are not entirely clear several possible explanations are given. Infection with gram negative sepsis was the predominant cause of death in the SCI-ESRD patients, while death secondary to cardiovascular disease predominated in the ambulatory-ESRD group. Furthermore, the urinary tract and infected decubitus ulcers were determined to be the major source for sepsis in the SCI patients. From these findings it would follow that more effective prevention and control of these infections would result in not only a lower incidence of renal failure but also a substantially reduced morbidity and mortality in chronic SCI.
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PMID:Renal pathology in end-stage renal disease associated with paraplegia. 671 46


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