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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Authors present a rare case of upper digestive bleeding, the etiology of which is represented by a pancreatic papillary adenocarcinoma placed in the body and tail of the pancreas, with bleeding through the Oddi's sphincter, which causes difficult problems of medical and surgical diagnosis and treatment. The patient was known with acute cholecysto-pancreatitis of lithiasic cause, which has been surgically cured in 1977, being under treatment in the last years for the pancreatic injury which had been chronic pancreatitis and for hyperglycemia. The laboratory explorations emphasized a severe anaemia which was identified through upper digestive endoscopy (intermittent active bleeding from the major papilla) confirmed by echo and CT exam (heterogeneously body tissue of 10/8 cm diameter, involving the body and the tail of the pancreas). The medical treatment was complex, including proteic, hematologic, acido-basic, balance of hyperglycemia, and was followed by the surgical intervention consisting in body and tail pancreatico-splenectomy, followed by a postsurgical abscess, which required drainage. The surgical evolution was favorable. 6 months after leaving the hospital, the patient was admitted to medical diseases clinic with the diagnosis of deep right ileofemoral
thrombophlebitis
, duodenal acute ulcer and acute
pneumonia
of average right lobe, causing difficult problems of medical treatment. On this pathologic background, the diabetic failure also appears and the echo exam showing multiple secondary hepatic and peritoneal metastatic determinations. In medical literature we only met 13 similar communications, problems of diagnosis and treatment being very much alike to those presented.
...
PMID:[A rare cause of upper digestive tract bleeding--pancreatic papillary adenocarcinoma]. 1556 May 64
Septic
thrombophlebitis
, as a result of invasion from adjacent nonvascular infections, includes conditions such as Lemierre syndrome (internal jugular vein septic
thrombophlebitis
), pylephlebitis (portal vein septic
thrombophlebitis
), and septic
thrombophlebitis
of the dural sinuses and the pelvic veins. All of these conditions are associated with a very high mortality if untreated. Appropriate antibacterial therapy dramatically improves the outcome of these infections and results in a low mortality rate, with the notable exception of septic
thrombophlebitis
of the dural sinuses. The endovascular nature of these infections results in secondary metastatic disease, including
pneumonia
, endocarditis, and arthritis due to septic embolization and/or hematogenous bacterial spread. The appropriate diagnosis and management of these infections depends on a high degree of clinical suspicion, the use of imaging studies, and early initiation of empiric antibacterial therapy. In this article, we review the diagnosis and management of septic
thrombophlebitis
, focusing on Lemierre syndrome, pylephlebitis, and septic
thrombophlebitis
of the pelvic veins.
...
PMID:Septic thrombophlebitis: diagnosis and management. 1648 45
Burns are one of the most common and devastating forms of trauma. Patients with serious thermal injury require immediate specialized care in order to minimize morbidity and mortality. Significant thermal injuries induce a state of immunosuppression that predisposes burn patients to infectious complications. A current summary of the classifications of burn wound infections, including their diagnosis, treatment, and prevention, is given. Early excision of the eschar has substantially decreased the incidence of invasive burn wound infection and secondary sepsis, but most deaths in severely burn-injured patients are still due to burn wound sepsis or complications due to inhalation injury. Burn patients are also at risk for developing sepsis secondary to
pneumonia
, catheter-related infections, and suppurative
thrombophlebitis
. The introduction of silver-impregnated devices (e.g., central lines and Foley urinary catheters) may reduce the incidence of nosocomial infections due to prolonged placement of these devices. Improved outcomes for severely burned patients have been attributed to medical advances in fluid resuscitation, nutritional support, pulmonary and burn wound care, and infection control practices.
...
PMID:Burn wound infections. 1661 55
We observed a number of cases of sepsis from bacteremia in children from community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), which led us to study its patterns of infection and outcome. A retrospective review identifying children admitted to our institution with blood culture-proven community-associated MRSA sepsis over a 2-year period was performed. The inclusion criteria were younger than 19 years old, two or more blood cultures for MRSA within 48 hours of admission, evidence of systemic inflammatory response syndrome, and no prior hospital admissions within 6 months. Eight patients were included; seven required mechanical ventilation. Vasopressors were required in seven patients. Four patients required extracorporeal membrane oxygenation. Four patients had culture-proven septic arthritis or
thrombophlebitis
and three of these patients developed bilateral necrotizing
pneumonia
. Bilateral necrotizing
pneumonia
was identified in the other four patients, but the primary source of infection was never identified. The overall intact neurologic survival was 50 per cent. Children with severe community-associated MRSA sepsis can rapidly progress to cardiorespiratory failure. Mortality appears to be high, and children may benefit from a search of their soft tissues and joints to identify the source of infection to prevent embolic dissemination.
...
PMID:Severe sepsis attributable to community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus: an emerging fatal problem. 1767 41
Meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), both hospital-acquired and community-acquired MRSA (CA-MRSA) strains, have increased in frequency in the last few years, reaching epidemic dimensions. This review discusses several clinical forms of staphylococcal infection leading to bacteraemia in a high proportion of cases. Staphylococcal (MRSA) bacteraemic
pneumonia
is predominantly seen in hospital-acquired
pneumonia
and ventilator-associated
pneumonia
, reaching a frequency of 8.4% of all bacteraemias, 30% of all nosocomial bacteraemias and 68% of all bacteraemias of patients hospitalised in Intensive Care Units. In patients with CA-MRSA
pneumonia
, the rate of bacteraemia is as high as 62%. Whereas in nosocomial bacteraemic
pneumonia
blood cultures become positive on the ninth day of
pneumonia
, in CA-MRSA bacteraemic
pneumonia
positive blood cultures appear early in the course of the infection. The
pneumonia
has a stormy course with the development of abscesses, empyema and extensive pulmonary damage. Vertebral osteomyelitis commonly occurs during intravenous catheter use, causing local
thrombophlebitis
that will seed to vertebral bodies and disks and may cause secondary sustained bacteraemia. Non-vertebral osteomyelitis is also on the increase, with a frequency that has doubled in recent years, mainly due to MRSA. Patients with haematological malignancies are particularly prone to this complication, usually following line infections. Epidural abscess is the most serious consequence of staphylococcal bacteraemia, leading to permanent neurological damage if not diagnosed early enough.
...
PMID:Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia with known sources. 1871 60
Community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection is epidemic in the community, differs from nosocomial MRSA in virulence, mechanisms, and antibiotic susceptibility, and exhibits diverse and often unique pathologic characteristics. The community-acquired MRSA USA 300 strains are transmitted largely by person-to-person contact and cause characteristic soft-tissue abscesses and, less commonly, other sometimes unusual and serious infections including a necrotizing
pneumonia
, and other necrotic infections such as necrotizing fasciitis, pelvic
thrombophlebitis
, and septic phlebitis. This MRSA 300 family remains susceptible to drugs active against nosocomial MRSA (ie, vancomycin, linezolid, daptomycin) and is often susceptible to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, doxycycline, and clindamycin. Recent epidemiologic data indicate that nosocomial MRSA (eg, mainly USA 100) strains are also present in the community and that MRSA USA 300 strains are present in hospital settings, with both families found in intermediate frequency in health care-associated settings (eg, nursing homes, dialysis centers). More work is needed to identify effective barrier precautions to limit their spread.
...
PMID:Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections. 1910 30
Despite implementation of CDC recommendations and bundled interventions for preventing catheter-associated blood stream infection, ventilator-associated
pneumonia
, or urinary catheter-associated infections, nosocomial infections and sepsis remain a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in critically ill children. Recent studies suggest that acquired critical illness stress-induced immune suppression (CRISIS) plays a role in the development of nosocomial infection and sepsis. This condition can be related to inadequate zinc, selenium, and glutamine levels, as well as hypoprolactinemia, leading to stress-induced lymphopenia, a predominant T(H)2 monocyte/macrophage state, and subsequent immune suppression. Prolonged immune dysfunction increases the likelihood of nosocomial infections associated with invasive devices. Although strategies to prevent common complications of critical illness are routinely employed (eg, prophylaxis for gastrointestinal bleeding,
thrombophlebitis
), no prophylactic strategy is used to prevent stress-induced immune suppression. This is the authors' rationale for the pediatric CRISIS prevention trial (NCT00395161), designed as a randomized, double-blind, controlled clinical investigation to determine if daily enteral supplementation with zinc, selenium, and glutamine as well as parenteral metoclopramide (a dopamine 2 receptor antagonist that reverses hypoprolactinemia) prolongs the time until onset of nosocomial infection or sepsis in critically ill children compared to enteral supplementation with whey protein. If effective, this combined nutritional and pharmacologic approach may lessen the excess morbidity and mortality as well as resource utilization associated with nosocomial infections and sepsis in this population. The authors present the design and analytic plan for the CRISIS prevention trial.
...
PMID:Rationale and design of the pediatric critical illness stress-induced immune suppression (CRISIS) prevention trial. 1940 4
We evaluated the relationship between registered nurse (RN) staffing and six post-surgical complications:
pneumonia
, septicemia, urinary tract infections,
thrombophlebitis
, fluid overload, and decubitus ulcers, in a dataset that contained the present on admission (POA) indicator. We analyzed a longitudinal panel of 283 acute care hospitals in California from 1996 to 2001. Using an adaptation of the Quality Health Outcomes Model, we found no statistically significant relationships between RN staffing and the complications. In addition, the signs of the relationships were opposite to those expected. That is, as staffing increased, so did some of the complications. We discuss potential reasons for these anomalous results, including the possibility that increases in RN staffing may result in earlier detection of complications. Other explanations include issues with risk adjustment, the lack of nurse level variables in the model, and issues with the POA indicator itself.
...
PMID:Nurse staffing and post-surgical complications using the present on admission indicator. 2001 18
Fusobacterium necrophorum is a non-spore-forming gram-negative anaerobic bacillus that may be the causative agent of localized or severe systemic infections. Systemic infections due to F.necrophorum are known as Lemierre's syndrome, postanginal sepsis or necrobacillosis. The most common clinical course of severe infections in humans is a progressive illness from tonsillitis to septicemia in previously healthy young adults. A septic
thrombophlebitis
arising from the tonsillar veins and extending into the internal jugular vein leads to septicemia and septic emboli contributing to the development of necrotic abscesses especially in lungs and other tissues such as liver, bone and joints. In this case report, a previously healthy man with
pneumonia
and empyema due to F.necrophorum has been presented. A 22 year-old man suffering from sore throat for seven days was admitted to emergency department with ongoing fever and dysphagia for three days. On admission he was already taking amoxicillin-clavulanic acid and his complaints were relieved with continuation of therapy to a total of 10 days. However, five days after the cessation of treatment he developed productive cough, fever and generalized myalgia. On physical examination, there were crackles on right lower lung, and chest X-ray revealed pulmonary consolidation on the right middle lobe. Levofloxacin therapy was started based on the diagnosis of
pneumonia
. While polymorphonuclear leucocytes and intracellular gram-negative bacilli were seen in Gram stained sputum smear, sputum culture was reported as normal flora. Although the patient's status had started to improve with treatment, his condition deteriorated with development of fever and dyspnea. Chest X-ray revealed consolidation, pulmonary infiltrates, pleural effusion and air-fluid level on the right. Meropenem, clarithromycin and linezolid were initiated and a chest tube was inserted with the preliminary diagnosis of necrotizing
pneumonia
, empyema and type-1 respiratory failure. While there was no growth on bronchoalveolar lavage fluid culture, thoracentesis material inoculated into thioglycolate broth revealed turbidity. Further inoculation onto Schaedler agar which was incubated under anaerobic conditions, yielded growth of catalase negative, indol positive, gram-negative anaerobic bacilli identified as F.necrophorum by BBL Crystal system (Becton Dickinson, USA). The detailed history of the patient revealed that fish bone had stuck in his throat a week ago. Clarithromycin and linezolid were discontinued and he was recovered within six weeks of meropenem treatment. F.necrophorum infection should be considered in the differential diagnosis of persistent head and neck infections with rapidly progressive metastatic necrotic lesions especially in healthy young adults and clindamycin or metranidazol should be added to the treatment protocols.
...
PMID:[Pneumonia caused by Fusobacterium necrophorum: is Lemierre syndrome still current?]. 2209 Mar 4
Septic pulmonary embolism is a serious and rare illness characterized by pulmonary infiltrates associated with an extrapulmonary infectious focus. It is mainly related to right-sided endocarditis, pelvic
thrombophlebitis
, vascular access and less frequently to deep infections such as osteomyelitis, septic arthritis and pyomyositis. The community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is an emerging pathogen with high virulence and rapid spread involving subjects without previous related diseases or known risk factors. It causes infections of skin and soft tissue and less frequently other serious infections such as necrotizing fascitits, septic arthritis, osteomyelitis, pyomyositis and necrotizing
pneumonia
. Epidemiologically, pathogenesis and clinical manifestations differ from those caused by MRSA acquired in the hospital. We present the case of a 67 year-old male with septic pulmonary embolism caused by community acquired MRSA that started with a skin infection.
...
PMID:[Septic pulmonary embolism of cutaneous origin]. 2289 85
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