Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020639 (hypoproteinemia)
1,134 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To determine the importance of bacteremia in hospitalized patients with diarrhea in Bangladesh, from September 1982 through August 1983 the authors obtained blood for culture from 1,824 patients who were suspected of having sepsis (44% of all admissions). Nontyphoid bacteremia occurred in 243 patients. The most common pathogens were the Enterobacteriaceae (n = 66 episodes), Staphylococcus aureus (n = 65), Pseudomonas aeruginosa and other non-glucose-fermenting bacilli (n = 50), Streptococcus pneumoniae (n = 40), and Haemophilus influenzae (n = 16). When compared with an equal number of control patients without bacteremia, bacteremic patients were significantly (p less than 0.05) more likely to be under 1 year of age (46.5% of bacteremic patients vs. 30.0% of control patients) and more often had abdominal tenderness (20.1% vs. 11.5%), hypoproteinemia (a serum protein level less than 60 g/liter) (58.9% vs. 42.9%), and a prior intravenous infusion (49.0% vs. 30.9%). The case-fatality rate was 29.7% in bacteremic patients versus 7.8% in controls (relative risk (RR) = 3.8, p less than 0.001). Factors that were associated with an increased risk of death in bacteremic patients were infection with a Gram-negative pathogen (RR = 2.48), decreased peristalsis (RR = 2.66), hypoproteinemia (RR = 3.36), hypothermia (RR = 2.54), and hypotension (RR = 2.19). Bacteremia appears to be an important link between diarrheal illness and death in Bangladesh. In children with diarrhea who are suspected of being septic, early implementation of antimicrobial therapy that is effective against the broad range of pathogens identified appears to be indicated.
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PMID:Bacteremia during diarrhea: incidence, etiology, risk factors, and outcome. 200 Aug 55

The total number of admissions and deaths of patients with shigellosis were ascertained at the Dhaka Treatment Centre of the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh, 1974-1988, and the characteristics of 67 patients who died were compared with those of 134 discharged alive. Of 9780 Shigella-infected inpatients, 889 (9.1%) died; 32.3% of deaths occurred in children less than 1 year of age. Fatality rates were highest (10.3%) in Shigella sonnei-infected patients and lowest (6.7%) in Shigella dysenteriae type 1-infected patients. Age less than 1 year, lack of breast feeding in patients 1-2 years of age, hypothermia, severe malnutrition, severe dehydration, altered consciousness, abdominal distension, thrombocytopenia, hypoproteinemia, hyponatremia, hypoglycemia, renal failure, and bacteremia were all significantly more common in case patients. In a multivariate analysis, younger age, decreased serum protein, altered consciousness, and thrombocytopenia were predictive of death. Thus in Bangladesh the fatality rate for hospitalized patients infected with any species of Shigella remains high despite relatively intensive inpatient care, and young, hypoproteinemic patients are at greatest risk of fatal illness.
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PMID:Death in shigellosis: incidence and risk factors in hospitalized patients. 231 28

We reviewed 57 episodes of Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteremia in 55 patients with hematologic disorders such as acute leukemia during a 16-year period, focusing especially on the prognosis. Survival at one week after onset was observed in only 39% of the episodes. Prognosis was significantly better in patients with unimicrobial bacteremia than in those with polymicrobial bacteremia (21/42 vs 1/15, p less than 0.01), in patients without shock than in those with shock (13/21 vs 9/36, p less than 0.02), in patients with granulocyte count at onset of at least 100/mm3 than in those with more marked granulocytopenia (10/13 vs 12/44, p less than 0.01), in patients with an increase in granulocyte count by at least 100/mm3 during their infection than in those without any subsequent increase (18/18 vs 4/13, p less than 0.001), and in patients with total serum protein level at onset of at least 6.0 g/dl than in those with hypoproteinemia (18/32 vs 4/25, p less than 0.01). Patients with bacteremia secondary to urogenital infection tended to have a higher one-week survival rate than those with pneumonia followed by bacteremia (4/8, 50% vs 2/9, 22%). With regard to the antibiotic treatment of unimicrobial bacteremia, 14 (70%) of 20 patients receiving therapy with one or two anti-pseudomonal beta-lactam antibiotics and an aminoglycoside in combination that were effective in vitro against the infecting organism survived, and so did only seven (32%) of 22 patients receiving therapy with either one in vitro effective beta-lactam or aminoglycoside or inadequate drugs (p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Pseudomonas aeruginosa bacteremia associated with hematologic disorders [III]. Prognostic factors]. 250 88

Pulmonary edema is an important feature of many newborn lung diseases, including respiratory distress from severe perinatal asphyxia, heart failure, hyaline membrane disease, pneumonitis from group B beta-hemolytic streptococcus, and chronic lung disease (bronchopulmonary dysplasia). Neonatal pulmonary edema often results from increased filtration pressure in the microcirculation of the lungs. This occurs during sustained hypoxia, in left ventricular failure associated with congenital heart disease or myocardial dysfunction, following excessive intravascular infusions of blood, colloid, fat, or electrolyte solution, and in conditions that increase pulmonary blood flow. Low intravascular protein osmotic pressure from hypoproteinemia may predispose infants to pulmonary edema. Hypoproteinemia is common in infants who are born prematurely. Large intravascular infusions of protein-free fluid further decrease the concentration of protein in plasma and thereby facilitate edema formation. Lymphatic obstruction by air (pulmonary interstitial emphysema) or fibrosis (long-standing lung disease) also may contribute to the development of edema. Bacteremia, endotoxemia, and prolonged oxygen breathing injure the pulmonary microvascular endothelium and cause protein-rich fluid to accumulate in the lungs. The risk of neonatal pulmonary edema can be reduced by several therapeutic measures designed to lessen filtration pressure, increase plasma protein osmotic pressure, and prevent or reduce the severity of lung injury.
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PMID:Edema formation in the lungs and its relationship to neonatal respiratory distress. 657 79

Pulmonary edema is an important cause of respiratory distress in newborn infants. It occurs with severe perinatal asphyxia, heart failure, hyaline membrane disease, persistent patency of the ductus arteriosus, pneumonitis from group B beta-hemolytic streptococcus, and chronic lung disease (bronchopulmonary dysplasia). Neonatal pulmonary edema often develops from increased pressure in the microcirculation of the lungs. This may occur in conjunction with sustained hypoxia; left ventricular failure associated with congenital heart disease or myocardial dysfunction; following excessive intravascular infusions of blood, colloid, fat, or electrolyte solution and in conditions that increase pulmonary blood flow. Low intravascular protein osmotic pressure from hypoproteinemia may predispose infants to pulmonary edema. Hypoproteinemia is common in infants who are born prematurely. Large intravascular infusions of protein-free fluid further decrease the concentration of protein in plasma and thereby facilitate edema formation. Lymphatic obstruction by air (pulmonary interstitial emphysema of fibrosis (chronic lung disease) also may contribute to the development of edema. Bacteremia, endotoxemia, and prolonged oxygen-breathing injure the pulmonary microvascular endothelium and cause protein-rich fluid to accumulate in the lungs. Epithelial protein leaks may develop when the transpulmonary pressure needed to inflate the lungs increases because of high surface tension at the air-liquid interface. Fibrin clots from in some of the air spaces, which in combination with atelectasis and edema constitute the pathologic features of hyaline membrane disease. The risk of neonatal pulmonary edema can be reduced by several therapeutic measures designed to lessen fluid filtration pressure, increase plasma protein osmotic pressure, and prevent or reduce the severity of lung injury.
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PMID:Edema formation in the newborn lung. 676 Oct 39

During a 22-year period, 13 patients with hematologic diseases developed bacteremia caused by the Bacteroides fragilis group, with a frequency which remained almost unchanged. Nine patients (69%) had polymicrobial infections. Acute leukemia was the most common underlying disease. The lower intestinal tract (necrotizing enterocolitis and anorectal abscesses) was the most common source of infection. Prior antibiotic therapy was the most frequent host condition before bacteremia, followed by cancer chemotherapy, neutropenia, thrombocytopenia and hypoproteinemia. Septic shock occurred only in seven patients with polymicrobial infections. Six patients, including five with shock, died within a week of onset, while the other seven survived for at least three weeks. Despite its clinical similarity to aerobic gram-negative infection, bacteremia due to the B. fragilis group may well, therefore, be suspected particularly when neutropenic patients who present with lower intestinal symptomatology develop a persistent fever unresponsive to the initial empiric antibiotic therapy.
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PMID:Bacteremia caused by the Bacteroides fragilis group in patients with hematologic diseases. 759 53

Findings are reported from a study conducted to determine the clinical features and outcome of shigellosis in young infants. The authors reviewed the hospital records of 159 infants of no greater than age 3 months and those of 159 children aged 1-10 years with shigellosis who were admitted to the Diarrhea Treatment Center in Dacca, Bangladesh. 82.8% of infants had a history of nonbloody diarrhea, 59.9% moderate or severe dehydration, 12% bacteremia, 32.7% fever, 1.9% abdominal tenderness, and 0% rectal prolapse. 42.7% of children had a history of nonbloody diarrhea, 32.1% moderate or severe dehydration, 5.0% bacteremia, 58.6% fever, 12.6% abdominal tenderness, and 8.3% rectal prolapse. Infections caused by Shigella boydii and Shigella sonnei were more common in infants, while Shigella dysenteriae type 1 infections were less common in infants than in older children. There was an equivalent proportion of Shigella flexneri infections in the two groups. Infants were twice as likely to die as older children. Only 17 infants were being exclusively breastfed at the onset of their illness. Multiple logistic regression analysis identified the independent predictors of death among infants to be gram-negative bacteremia, ileus, decreased bowel sound, hyponatremia, hypoproteinemia, and a lower number of erythrocytes detected on the microscopic examination of stool specimens. Diarrhea management algorithms which rely exclusively upon clinical findings of dysentery to diagnose and treat shigellosis are likely to be unreliable in this high-risk age group.
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PMID:Shigellosis in neonates and young infants. 802 64

A 66-year-old woman with neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) was brought to the emergency room with seizures and high-grade fever. Seizure in adult NF1 patients raises concern for intracranial lesions. However, neurological examination and central nervous system imaging failed to detect any causative intracranial lesions for her seizure. Gram-positive cocci, Streptococcus anginosus, were detected by blood cultures. Abdominal computed tomography revealed a well-defined round mass 7 cm in diameter, which was found to be a small intestinal gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) containing an abscess. There was fistula formation between the intestinal lumen and the abscess, in which there were numerous Gram-positive cocci. The seizure may have been caused by hypoosmolality (hyponatremia and hypoproteinemia), which may result from decreased food intake associated with high-grade fever and general malaise. In this case GIST originating from the small intestine was invaded by S. anginosus through a fistula, leading to abscess formation, bacteremia, high-grade fever, and seizure, which was the first clinical manifestation.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal Stromal Tumor in a Patient with Neurofibromatosis: Abscess Formation in the Tumor Leading to Bacteremia and Seizure. 2110 3

The incidence of candidemia has increased in recent years. This paper reports a retrospective analysis of 270 cases of candidemia occurring from January 2000 to December 2009 at a teaching hospital in China. Demographic and clinical data were collected from patient medical records and the hospital's laboratory database. Candida albicans (35.9%) was the most prevalent species isolated, followed by C. tropicalis (21.8%) and C. glabrata (13.0%). Antifungal susceptibilities to fluconazole, flucytosine, and amphotericin B tended to decline over the study period. The most common risk factors were the presence of central venous catheters, endotracheal intubation, hypoproteinemia, renal failure, and concurrent bacteremia. In the 181 (67.0%) patients who died during hospitalization, endotracheal intubation, hypoproteinemia, and C. albicans were the major factors associated with mortality. This study highlights the importance of considering the possibility of invasive Candida infection in patients exposed to these risk factors.
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PMID:Retrospective analysis of epidemiology and prognostic factors for candidemia at a hospital in China, 2000-2009. 2318 3