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Query: UMLS:C0031154 (peritonitis)
15,372 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Continuous arterio-venous haemofiltration (CAVH), a simple technique not employing pumps, was used for treatment of acute renal failure in 25 intensive care patients (mean age 52 +/- 16 [SD] years). Acute renal failure was due to trauma in 9 patients, occurred after surgery in 7 patients and was related to septicaemia in 5 patients, peritonitis in 2 patients and pancreatitis in one patient; in one patient acute renal failure developed during pregnancy after preexisting renal disease. Seventeen patients were oliguric and 8 patients were non-oliguric, with a mean daily urine output of 507 +/- 407 ml. At the start of CAVH the serum creatinine level was 511 +/- 198 mumol/l. The duration of treatment with CAVH was 1 to 36 days (average 9.3 days). Access to the circulation was by cannulation of the femoral artery and vein in 23 patients and by Scribner shunt in 2 patients. After an initial systemic dose of 2000 IU heparin, a continuous infusion of 250-1000 IU/hr into the arterial blood line was administered, adjusted to a partial thrombin time of 58 +/- 28 sec. With this heparin regimen a single haemofilter could be used for an average time of 2.6 +/- 1.2 days. The mean spontaneous filtration rate was 6 +/- 2 ml/min, resulting in the following serum levels: creatinine 490 +/- 187 mumol/l; urea 39 +/- 12.5 mmol/l; potassium 4.5 +/- 0.5 mmol/l. Nine catheter-associated complications occurred in 5 patients. The most important aspect of CAVH was its simplicity, optimal control of fluid balance and the possibility of unlimited parenteral nutrition. Uremia was adequately and continuously controlled. Prognosis of ARF was related to the patients' underlying illness.
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PMID:[Continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration for the treatment of acute kidney failure]. 398 93

Previous studies of experimental sepsis suggested that excessive systemic vasodilatation might be the stimulus to renal hypofiltration and fluid retention in sepsis. Successful therapy for this syndrome requires agents that either act to improve systemic haemodynamics without adverse renal effects, or that act directly on the kidney without impairing circulatory homeostasis. The plasma kallikrein-kinin system is a potent vasodilator pathway, activated by endotoxin. We studied the effect of aprotinin (Trasylol), which inhibits plasma kallikrein, in an ovine model of surgically-induced intra-abdominal sepsis. Given either as an early or late intervention, aprotinin was associated with increased mean arterial pressure and systemic vascular resistance, improved glomerular filtration rate, and increased urinary sodium excretion. In further studies, treatment with the thromboxane synthetase inhibitor, U63,557A (Upjohn), either before or after the surgical induction of peritonitis, was associated with increased glomerular filtration rate and sodium excretion, without any effect on systemic haemodynamics. Logical use of specific antagonists, based on an understanding of the pathophysiology of the septic ARF syndrome, is a desirable strategy.
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PMID:Acute renal failure and sepsis: therapeutic approaches. 752 64

We performed a prospective study to examine the epidemiology and microbiology of peritonitis complicating acute intermittent peritoneal dialysis (IPD) performed in an in-hospital setting for the management of acute and chronic renal failure and to see the effect of a closed-drainage system on altering the frequency and cause of peritonitis. Over a 15-month period, 79 patients were treated with acute IPD for a total of 136 treatments each ranging in length from 2 to 40 days (median, 4 days). The majority of cases had acute renal failure (ARF; 65%) and were treated in intensive care units (ICUs; 74%) with serious comorbid conditions (60%). About half were treated with a two-bag, ventable (open)-drainage system with unprotected spikes, and the other half were treated with a single-bag, spike-protected, closed-drainage system. There were 27 cases of peritonitis for a rate of 4.5 cases/100 patient-days at risk. About half were gram-positive infections; the remainder were gram-negative or mixed (25%) or Candida sp (25%). The use of a closed-drainage system reduced the incidence of system-related peritonitis from 3.6 to 1.5 cases/100 patient-days. There was a high rate of peritonitis in the first 48 hours of treatment, which fell to a low stable rate thereafter and remained so for up to 15 days of continuous IPD. The use of a closed-drainage system eliminated the early (< 48 hours) high rate of peritonitis and maintained a low constant rate of peritonitis throughout treatment. There was an association of ARF and severe comorbid disease with more virulent organisms (gram-negative, mixed, and Candida sp), which, in turn, were both associated with antecedent broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy. Random positive surveillance cultures showed a frequency distribution similar to that of peritonitis cases over the duration of treatment, but with less virulent organisms. Peritonitis in acute IPD occurs when large or repeated inocula of organisms from the prevailing flora overwhelm the peritoneal immune clearance mechanisms. Prolonged courses of broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy provide no protection, but shift the resulting infecting flora toward more virulent pathogens. A closed-drainage system provides one method to reduce the frequency of peritoneal contamination.
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PMID:The epidemiology of peritonitis in acute peritoneal dialysis: a comparison between open- and closed-drainage systems. 844 7

In the present study we highlight the epidemiology, etiologic spectrum, and evaluation of ARF in adults. We then expand on the pathophysiologic mechanisms of renal failure and discuss the rationale for current therapeutic strategies in ARF patients. A total of 79 patients (45 male, female 34), aged 18-75 years (median age 51.2 +/- 17.7 years) with acute renal failure were studied in 5 years (January 1990 through October 1995). Emergency hemodialysis sessions following an acute anuric episode were instituted in 39 cases (49.3% of all patients). The median number of hemodialysis procedures per patient treated at our institution was 3.2 +/- 1.9. The total number of acute interstitial nephritis-associated ARF was 40. In 30 of them (75%) the acute renal insult included a combination of several therapeutic antimicrobial agents, in 2 cases (5%) ARF followed the administration of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, in 1 (2.5%) it resulted from a combined therapeutic regimen and in the remaining 5 (12.5%) from the application of a single drug. Acute interstitial nephritis developed in 2 patients following a viral infection. In the hemodialysis-treated ARF group 12 patients (29.77%) had interstitial nephritis and 2 patients (5.13%) presented with renal impairment for an unspecified period of time preceding the development of overt ARF. In a subset of this group of patients, ARF occurred in 7 patients (17.95%) following an urologic intervention, in 8 patients (20.51%) as a consequence of thermal or mechanical trauma or intoxication and in 3 cases (7.69%) it resulted from fever of unknown origin. Three patients with postoperative peritonitis and 4 other (10.26%) with postoperative complications were encountered in our series. No cases of septic abortion-related or obstetric-related ARF were recorded. 92.3% of all hemodialysis-treated patients seen at our Institution had received a combination of antibiotics and only 2 patients had been pre-treated with a single antimicrobial agent. Our results underscore the strong tendency towards diversity in the etiologic spectrum of clinical entities causing ARF and the increase in the number of acute interstitial nephritis. These factors highlight the importance of precise dosing and administration of drugs, especially antibiotics, as well as the duration of antibiotic treatment.
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PMID:Acute renal failure--etiologic and therapeutic considerations. A five-year experience at a single institution. 957 56

In our institution, the first patient was treated by HD in 1955. In the middle of the '60s, the PD technique, revised by Maxwell (1), was implemented. The access to peritoneum was obtained by repeated puncturing of the abdomen, the catheter being removed after each session. In 1966, our first results on one year of PD were published (20 patients treated, 13 affected by ARF and 7 by CRF, for a total number of 150 sessions). Since 1967, the procedure of the repeated punturing was improved by the Seldinger technique. The efficiency of the PD intermittent treatment was increased with the "fast shift" schedule and PD automation was pursued with the project of a cycler (1968). The first CRF patients were treated by fast shift PD. In the late intermittent PD phase, the adoption of permanent catheters, destined to endure in our practice, the rigid and the soft indwelling for long-term treatments, allowed us to launch programs of home and nocturnal PD. With the incoming CAPD age, the greatest care was directed to the role of the catheter. The adoption of the surgical insertion by paramedian approach through rectus muscle, minimized, in our experience, the early complications. With the reduction of peritonitis rate, the later catheter complications increased in terms of patient discomfort, hospitalization and technique survival. On those grounds, in our institution a prospective trial on a ten year period was undertaken to compare, in terms of late complications rate, new versions of the classic Tenckhoff straight catheter (ST). The surgical insertion method was adopted for all the types, for a total of 196 catheters in 163 CRF patients. The tip displacement rate (12.2% with ST) decreased, albeit non significantly, with Swan Neck (7.9%), but was markedly and significantly reduced (1.0%) with the Self-Locating (SL) catheter experience. The surgical insertion of SL was comparable to that of ST. For those reasons, in recent years, in our institution the SL catheter became the first choice catheters for CRF patients.
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PMID:The catheter as Ariadne's thread to follow the path of Peritoneal Dialysis (PD) through the long-term experience of a Center. 1648 48

Haemodialysis (HD) and peritoneal dialysis (PD) remains the cornerstone of management of patients with renal failure in developing countries as renal transplantation is just developing in most. Although both HD and PD are cost intensive, specific advantages and disadvantages have been identified with either of them. Comparative assessment of their effectiveness, benefits and cost will assist in providing a rational basis for preference of one or the other especially in third world countries where renal replacement therapy remains unaffordable and therefore relatively inaccessible to majority of patients. We therefore conducted this prospective randomised study to compare the effectiveness, benefits, cost and complications of acute or intermittent PD (IPD) and HD using locally manufactured PD fluids. Two groups of twenty patients with renal failure matched for age and clinical diagnosis were managed with IPD and HD and the effectiveness, costs and complications of both modalities compared. We found that both were comparably effective in the control of uraemia with significant reductions in the serum urea, creatinine and potassium from 29.2 +/- 7.2 mmol/L, 1693.7 +/- 580.5micromol/L and 4.8 +/- 1.2 mmol/L to 13.2 +/- 4.6 mmol/L, 796.0 +/- 458.0micromol/ L and 3.3 +/- 0.6 mmol/L respectively for IPD (P<0.05) and 34.4 +/- 9.0mmol/L, 1536.0 +/- 832.5 micromol/L and4.8 +/- 1.3 mmoV L to 14.6 +/- 7.5 mmol/L, 830.0 +/- 570.7 micromol/L and 3.9 +/- 0.8 mmol/L respectively for HD (P<0.05). In addition, there were significant improvements in serum bicarbonate in both groups. There was no significant difference in percentage reduction in serum urea, creatinine and serum potassium in both groups (P>0.05). However, HD managed patients required more blood transfusion (P<0.05). There were also comparably significant reductiohs in systolic, diastolic and mean arterial blood pressures in both groups (P<0.05). The costs of dialysis as well as the total cost of hospitalization were found to be significantly lower in patients managed with IPD (P<0.05). The commonest complication observed in patients managed with IPD was peritonitis while in patients managed with HD it was dialysis-induced hypotension. The clinical outcome was equally good in all the ARF patients as all of them recovered irrespective of the treatment modality; CRF patients did not fare as well with 37.5% mortality observed. We conclude that IPD and HD are effective renal replacement therapies with the former being significantly cheaper. IPD should be encouraged in our patients with ARF or acute exacerbation of chronic renal failure.
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PMID:An analysis of the effectiveness and benefits of peritoneal dialysis and haemodialysis using Nigerian made PD fluids. 1674 53

Trafficking and cell adhesion are key properties of cells of the immune system. However, the molecular pathways that control these cellular behaviors are still poorly understood. Cybr is a scaffold protein highly expressed in the hematopoietic/immune system whose physiological role is still unknown. In vitro studies have shown it regulates LFA-1, a crucial molecule in lymphocyte attachment and migration. Cybr also binds cytohesin-1, a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for the ARF GTPases, which affects actin cytoskeleton remodeling during cell migration. Here we show that expression of Cybr in vivo is differentially modulated by type 1 cytokines during lymphocyte maturation. In mice, Cybr deficiency negatively affects leukocytes circulating in blood and lymphocytes present in the lymph nodes. Moreover, in a Th1-polarized mouse model, lymphocyte trafficking is impaired by loss of Cybr, and Cybr-deficient mice with aseptic peritonitis have fewer cells than controls present in the peritoneal cavity, as well as fewer leukocytes leaving the bloodstream. Mutant mice injected with Moloney murine sarcoma/leukemia virus develop significantly larger tumors than wild-type mice and have reduced lymph node enlargement, suggesting reduced cytotoxic T-lymphocyte migration. Taken together, these data support a role for Cybr in leukocyte trafficking, especially in response to proinflammatory cytokines in stress conditions.
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PMID:The scaffold protein Cybr is required for cytokine-modulated trafficking of leukocytes in vivo. 1680 63