Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Liver transplant is the first therapeutic choice in most of the advanced liver diseases. Nevertheless, its performance originates a number of complications derived from: a) conservation techniques of the organ (in our study a prolonged time of hot ischemia was significantly associated with); b) surgery (all patients who required massive blood transfusions developed metabolic alkalosis); c) the graft itself (all the F 1. degrees were significantly infected), and d) extrahepatic causes (cyclosporin was responsible for high blood pressure and nephrotoxicity which appeared as oliguria with good response to furosemide, as well as hyperglycemia). Some other relevant results in our series were: right pleural effusion and thrombopenia which appeared with a high incidence. Infections were usually originated the staphylococcus which grows in half of the cultures. We also want to highlight the short mean stay and the low mortality incidence in the ICU.
...
PMID:[Complications of liver transplant in intensive care. Experience in 130 cases]. 176 10

Sepsis and trauma have similarities in their immunopathologic profiles. Both conditions can result in multi-system organ failure which is sometimes associated with cytokine generation and inflammatory cell activation. Furthermore, decreases in peripheral blood monocyte expression of HLA-DR have been noted in both human sepsis and trauma. However, the magnitude, onset, and time course of such stimuli are often difficult to ascertain in human studies. Thus, to study a more detailed in vivo immunologic profile in these conditions, rat models were employed. Our aim was to describe and analyze cytokine and peripheral blood immunophenotype patterns in bacterially induced rat sepsis and to compare this to rat ischemia-reperfusion injury. Sprague-Dawley rats underwent either bacterial injection with enterotoxin producing Staphylococcus aureus or hind limb ischemia/ reperfusion. Two bacterial doses which were either lethal or sublethal at 24-48 hours were utilized. Peripheral blood neutrophils and B-lymphocytes were studied for expression of beta-integrins (CD11b and CD11b/c) and I-A, respectively, using flow cytometry. Corresponding plasma levels of TNF alpha and interferon gamma were measured by ELISA. At 24 hr, a lethal bacterial lethal bacterial dose injection resulted in significantly higher levels of neutrophil CD11b/c expression (p < 0.005) compared with ischemia-reperfusion treatment. B-cell I-A expression was also higher in lethal sepsis. Gamma interferon levels were significantly higher in lethal sepsis compared with ischemia-reperfusion (p = 0.005). Studies over time showed that CD11b expression and interferon gamma were both more marked at 6 hr than at 24 hr in lethal sepsis. This pattern was not observed in sublethal sepsis or in ischemia-reperfusion. CD11b/c expression on the other hand remained elevated at comparable levels at 6 and 24 hr in lethal sepsis. B-cell I-A expression in ischemia-reperfusion and sublethal sepsis decreased at 24 hr compared with baseline. Lethal sepsis in rats injected with enterotoxin producing staphylococcus results in phasic alterations in neutrophil CD11b and plasma interferon levels prior to death. In analogy to the findings of monocyte decreases in DR expression observed in human trauma and sepsis, rat B-cell I-A expression showed decreases in sublethal sepsis as well as in ischemia-reperfusion injury. However, this was not observed in lethal sepsis. These findings have implications in understanding the immunologic/inflammatory changes observed in human sepsis and trauma.
...
PMID:The pattern of inflammation in rat sepsis due to enterotoxin-producing Staphylococcus aureus: a comparison with ischemia-reperfusion injury. 915 Nov 99

Patients suffering from vascular disease are often a challenge for the acute pain service. Ischaemia, impaired wound healing, stump and phantom limb pain often require a complex analgesic regimen. Invasive measures such as spinal or epidural catheters can be very helpful but carry the risk of infection, as shown by this case report. A 53-year-old woman with a ten-year history of diabetes developed arterial vascular disease. Her right lower leg had been amputated two years previously. She was now admitted with necroses of the left forefoot. A bypass operation was performed under general anaesthesia. Because of intractable ischaemic pain, she was provided with an epidural catheter by the acute pain service. The bypass occluded, however, and a few days later her left lower leg also had to be amputated, this operation being performed under epidural anaesthesia with bupivacaine. The catheter was subsequently used for postoperative pain control and as a means to prevent phantom limb pain. When signs of superficial catheter infection were noticed days later, the catheter was immediately removed. Intractable pain then developed in the left leg which could not be sufficiently controlled with opioids and NSAIDs, and so a second epidural catheter was inserted one segment rostrally. Several days later the infected vascular prosthesis had to be removed followed by amputation of the thigh, this operation also being performed in epidural anaesthesia. Eleven days after insertion of the first epidural catheter, the patient complained of low back pain and headache. Examination by a neurologist revealed no signs of intraspinal infection. The second epidural catheter dislocated at this point in time and it was decided to introduce a third one, this being the only means to treat the otherwise intractable stump pain. Ten days later meningism, Kernig's sign and leucocytosis developed. NMR tomography detected intraspinal fluid in the epidural space at the dorsal border of the spinal canal. A hemilaminectomy was performed. The spinal epidural space showed signs of inflammation of the adipose tissue, but no pus. A little necrotic material and residues of an old haematoma were removed and the epidural space was lavaged. Specimens taken from the epidural material revealed colonisation with staphylococcus epidermidis, which was sensitive to the broad spectrum antibiotics formerly given to the patient to treat the infection in the left stump. By the next day, all signs of epiduritis had disappeared and the patient recovered completely.
...
PMID:[Epiduritis after long-term pain therapy with an epidural catheter--review of the literature with a current case report]. 932 67

We encountered a case with bilateral fistulas of coronary arteries into the right atrium, a rare cardiac anomaly. The case was a 17-year-old woman, who visited our hospital at the age of 11 because of fever. At that time, the patient was diagnosed as having a left coronary artery-right atrial fistula through cardiac catheterization (CAG). When the patient developed staphylococcus infected endocarditis at the age of 16, a thick fistula of the coronary artery, directly running from the deformed left coronary arterial sinus, a fistula of the left circumflex branch, and also a fistula of the right coronary artery into the right atrium were detected by CAG. The outlets of these fistulas were closed from the inside of the right atrium under artificial cardiopulmonary circulation and cardiac arrest, and each fistula was ligated at the outside of cardiac chambers. At that time, we took particular care that any branch of the sinuatrial node was not injured. Although all fistulas were confirmed to be closed by postoperative CAG, and no evidence of ischemia was detected by myocardial scintigraphy, deformity of the left coronary arterial sinus remained, requiring further follow up.
...
PMID:[A case of coronary arterial fistula originating from both coronary artery and draining to the right atrium]. 1003 48

Optimal medical treatment of ischemic diabetic ulcers is multifactorial. Infection is very common and it is necessary to distinguish between limb or life threatening infections and non-limb-threatening infections. The major pathogen associated with non-limb-threatening infection is staphylococcus aureus; oral antibiotics such as amoxicillin/clavulanate or clindamycin can be used. For severe infection, empiric antibiotic therapy is broader-spectrum covering staphylococci, streptococci, gram-negative bacilli and enterococci; intravenous administration is the rule. Duration of antibiotic therapy depends on severity and depth of infection, and on requirement of surgical debridment. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor is a growth factor stimulating proliferation and function of neutrophils. As an adjunctive therapy for limb-threatening infections, it is associated with a lower rate of amputation. Increasing arterial perfusion if the patient is unsuitable for reconstructive surgery or angioplasty is desirable. Iloprost is an analogue of epoprostenol with effects on platelet aggregability and vasodilatation. It improves ulcer healing, decreases pain, slightly diminishes the rate of amputation. Systemic hyperbaric oxygen therapy can perhaps improve clinical outcome but additional research is needed to define the specific indications and benefits of this treatment modality. Local care is not rationalized and depends on local habits. Debridment is required. Non necrotic wounds can be covered by modern dressing (hydrophilic dressing, alginates, hydrocolloid). Necrotic wounds are dryed until surgical revascularization, or excised if they are limited and superficial. Pinch grafts are very useful for arterial ulcers. The place of topical growth factor like PDGF (platelet derived growth factor) and of living skin equivalents (dermagraft, apligraf) is not defined in ischaemic diabetic ulcers. Treatment of edema is necessary, because it retards or complicates healing. Inelastic bandages can be useful with good tolerance if ischemia is not critical. Pneumatic foot compression is under evaluation. Electric stimulation could be an adjuncting treatment, but with a problem of compliance. Reducing plantar pressure is always necessary.
...
PMID:[Local care and medical treatment for ischemic diabetic ulcers]. 1223 32

Floxacilline is a beta-lactam antibiotic of the penicillin class. In our context it is used to fight against infections caused by gram-positive bacteria, including staphylococcus aureus. However, floxacilline should be administered with great caution due to its possible side-effects. Our study reports the case of a 6-year old boy who underwent surgery for the treatment of a humeral fracture. The child was treated with injectable floxacilline following a suspected orthopaedic device infection 2 months after surgery. The day after starting antibiotic treatment, the child presented with acute ischemia of the right hand. Then, he was referred to us. Explorations objectified occlusion of the radial artery. The patient underwent relieving fasciotomy and received postoperative heparin. The evolution was marked by gangrene affecting the whole hand. The aim of our study was to educate caregivers about the risk of occurrence of this disastrous complication and about the measures to prevent it.
...
PMID:[Gangrene of the hand due to accidental intra-arterial injection of floxacilline: about a case]. 2829 37