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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (cirrhosis)
42,195 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is an increasingly recognized complication of cirrhosis with ascites. However, the presence of ascites from any cause appears to be a risk factor for this infection. The etiology of SBP is multifactorial, including derangements in the reticuloendothelial system, abnormalities of both the serum and ascitic fluid humoral immune systems, and systemic bacteremia. Gram-negative enteric pathogens are the etiologic agents in 70% of the cases; anaerobes are an uncommon cause. Fever and abdominal pain are the most common presenting symptoms. However, asymptomatic patients are being increasingly recognized. When SBP is suspected, paracentesis is indicated. An absolute polymorphonuclear leukocyte count greater than 500/mm3 is highly suggestive of SBP. Ascitic fluid lactate and pH may offer additional diagnostic assistance when the PMN count is ambiguous. Appropriate antibiotic therapy should be initially based on the centrifuged Gram stain of ascites as well as the patient's renal function. Mortality is substantial and appears to be related to the severity of the underlying liver disease.
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PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. A review of pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment. 331 22

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP), a fascinating disease that had been reported perhaps 50 times in varying guises over the preceding century, suddenly burst forth in the 1960s and was recognized in clusters of cases almost simultaneously in Paris, London, and West Haven, Connecticut. The spectrum of the disease has broadened. Initially, it was associated almost exclusively with alcoholic cirrhosis, but it has now been found in association with posthepatitic cirrhosis, cryptogenic cirrhosis, chronic active liver disease, and, occasionally, in biliary cirrhosis and cardiac cirrhosis. Recently, it has been reported in alcoholic hepatitis and acute viral hepatitis. It occurs occasionally in malignant ascites and in pancreatitis in the absence of cirrhosis. It is surprisingly common in disseminated lupus, in which it occurs relatively more commonly than in alcoholic cirrhosis. A similar syndrome, primary peritonitis, occurs frequently in children with nephrotic ascites. The clinical pattern of SBP has broadened. Initially it consisted of abdominal pain, fever, rebound tenderness, hypoactive bowel sounds, hypotension, encephalopathy, and cloudy ascites with large numbers of polymorphonuclear leukocytes in ascitic fluid. Each and every symptom, sign, and laboratory abnormality may be absent; indeed, the syndrome can be completely silent. Initially, the causative bacteria appeared to be almost exclusively enteric, but now the list of bacteria isolated in cases of SBP looks like a bacteriology textbook. Anaerobes are rare. Multiple organisms usually suggest nonspontaneous origin such as perforation or vasopressin induction. The differentiation between spontaneous and nonspontaneous bacterial peritonitis is crucial in the differential diagnosis. The great majority of cases of SBP develop in the hospital, 80% more than one week after admission. It is therefore a nosocomial disease that may be precipitated by procedure-induced bacteremia, gastrointestinal bleeding, or diarrhea, and it tends to occur in patients with low ascitic fluid protein (complement) concentrations and severe portal-systemic shunting.
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PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis: variant syndromes. 368 33

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, due to Capnocytophaga ochracea, developed in a 65-year-old alcoholic patient with extensive cirrhosis and ascites. Previously reported human infections with this organism have included peridontal diseases, septicemia, and arthritis. This is the first report of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis associated with Capnocytophaga species.
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PMID:Peritonitis involving Capnocytophaga ochracea. 402 64

A patient who developed fatal spontaneous bacterial peritonitis associated with cardiac ascites is reported. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis most frequently occurs in patients with decompensated cirrhosis of alcoholic or nonalcoholic type. Although there are reports of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis occurring in patients with nephrotic syndrome, or with acute or chronic hepatitis, there appear to be no reports of spontaneous bacterial infection developing in cardiac ascites.
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PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis associated with cardiac ascites. 648 15

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) occurs most frequently in patients with cirrhosis and preexistent ascites; SBP has not been previously recognized in association with acute liver disease. We report two patients with acute hepatitis B infection who developed SBP. Patient 1 had Streptococcus pneumoniae peritonitis and bacteremia, but did not have ascites until after the peritoneal infection was evident. Subsequent liver biopsy and follow-up studies confirmed the clinical diagnosis of acute hepatitis. Patient 2 had submassive hepatic necrosis due to hepatitis B and developed ascites before Streptococcus fecalis SBP. Although the association of SBP with acute hepatic injury is rare, these two patients illustrate that the syndrome of SBP does occur with acute liver disease.
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PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis associated with acute viral hepatitis. 680 53

A three year old child with cirrhosis of the liver and ascites caused by alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency, developed severe abdominal pain with diarrhea and fever. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis was diagnosed by demonstrating a purulent ascitic fluid with gram-positive cocci in the smear which were identified as pneumococci in the bacterial culture. The peritonitis subsided under antibiotic treatment without complications. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in children with cirrhosis of the liver is mentioned in the literature, but up to now, however, only three cases were reported in detail. In order to establish the diagnosis, abdominal tap should be tried rather than explorative laparotomy, the demonstration of gram-positive cocci is diagnostic of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. With early antibiotic therapy, prognosis of the disease is favourable. Newborns and children with nephrotic syndrome, however, are particularly at risk.
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PMID:[Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in cirrhosis of the liver caused by alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency (author's transl)]. 698 Oct 63

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is a specific infectious complication in liver cirrhosis. The reasons for the preferred location of infection on the peritoneum are not clear. The aims of the present study were to ascertain whether hepatogenic ascites fluid is chemotactically effective, what part is played by complement factor C3 and whether there are inhibitors of chemotaxis in ascites. Chemotaxis of granulocytes in serum and ascites fluid was measured in 18 patients with cirrhosis and ascites and in 18 healthy individuals using the Boyden chamber method. In the patients, the chemotactic effect of serum was reduced significantly. Ascites fluid had lower chemotactic activity than autologous serum (P < 0.01), directly correlated to C3 levels (P < 0.025). There was a significant correlation between chemotaxis in serum and in ascites fluid (P < 0.005). Adding ascites fluid to serum led to reduction of chemotactic activity only in the patients (P < 0.025). In conclusion, the chemotactic effect of ascites fluid is considerably lower than that of serum and is proportional to local concentrations of C3. Chemotaxis-inhibiting factors can also be identified in ascites fluid, their pathogenetic relevance being limited.
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PMID:Influence of ascites on the chemotaxis of granulocytes in patients with cirrhosis. 778 65

Medical records of 18 patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) and 19 patients with culture negative neutrocytic ascites (CNNA) were reviewed. The diagnosis of SBP was based on a positive ascitic fluid culture, a polymorphonuclear cell count (PMN) greater than 250 cells/mm3 and the absence of an intra-abdominal source of infection. The diagnosis of CNNA was based on a PMN count greater than 250 cells/mm3, a negative ascitic fluid culture, the absence of an intra-abdominal source of infection and no antibiotic treatment in the preceding 30 days. All patients in both groups had liver cirrhosis, which was mainly (62.2%) due to HBV infection. A single strain, mostly 'a Gram-negative' bacillus, was recovered from the ascitic fluid culture in the vast majority of patients (83%) with SBP. There were no significant differences between the clinical data of both groups. However, the CNNA group had a significantly better Pugh score (P value = 0.01) with a mean score of 9.42 +/- 2.24, compared to the SBP group (10.94 +/- 2.88). The only significant difference in the laboratory data was that the total bilirubin was higher in the SBP group (P < 0.01). Hospital mortality was significantly higher in the SBP patients compared to those with CNNA, 50 and 16%, respectively (P < 0.03). Recurrent ascitic fluid infection occurred in one of five patients who initially presented. In contrast no recurrence was documented in 12 patients with CNNA. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is a serious complication of liver cirrhosis with significantly higher mortality than CNNA. A single organism, usually enteric, is the most common causative agent.
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PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and culture negative neutrocytic ascites in patients with non-alcoholic liver cirrhosis. 782 91

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in liver cirrhosis is due to the passage of intestinal bacteria into intestinal lymph vessels, systemic circulation and ascitic fluid. It may occur in patients with severe portal hypertension and hepatic failure, impaired reticuloendothelial phagocytic activity and low ascitic fluid opsonic activity. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is a monomicrobial infection usually caused by gram-negative bacteria. The treatment of choice of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is cefotaxime. Several subgroups of cirrhotic patients have been shown to be predisposed to develop spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, including cases with gastrointestinal hemorrhage, patients with high serum bilirubin and low ascitic fluid protein concentration (< 1 g/dl), and patients who had recovered from an episode of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis. Since spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is associated with a relatively high in-hospital mortality rate (20-40%), prophylactic measures to prevent this infection are required. Short-term and long-term selective intestinal decontamination with oral norfloxacin has proved highly effective in preventing bacterial infection and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in bleeding cirrhotic patients as well as recurrence of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis.
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PMID:Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in liver cirrhosis: treatment and prophylaxis. 784 26

Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) is a frequent and severe complication of cirrhosis. Escherichia coli is the most frequent bacterium isolated in this condition. The presence of capsular antigens, mainly the K1 capsular polysaccharide, has been associated with invasiveness in E coli infections. Capsular serotypes of E coli causing SBP were determined in 37 cirrhotic patients. Twenty-seven strains were encapsulated (72.9%), 9 of them (24.3%) with K1 capsular polysaccharide, and 10 were nonencapsulated. Patients with encapsulated E coli showed a significantly higher incidence (92.5% vs. 50%; P < .01) and number of complications per patient (1.9 +/- 1.1 vs. 0.8 +/- 1.0; P < .01) than patients with nonencapsulated strains. Although mortality was higher in patients with encapsulated strains (44.4% vs. 20%), the difference did not reach statistical significance. Considering patients infected by encapsulated strains, the incidence of complications and mortality were similar in patients with or without K1 strains. These data suggest that the presence of encapsulated strains could have a prognostic significance in SBP caused by E coli in cirrhotic patients.
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PMID:Escherichia coli capsular polysaccharide and spontaneous bacterial peritonitis in cirrhosis. 787 65


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