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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An outbreak of nosocomial staphylococcal infections occurred over a six months period in an intensive care unit. This outbreak was caused by a single phage type of oxacillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus (SA) which infected ten patients. Six patients had bacteremia with infected catheter, two with urinary tract infection and two patients had a pneumonia. The median SAPS was 13. Four patients died. An epidemiologic study was performed to know SA nasal carriage prevalence of patients and hospital staff. There were seven isolates of SA from 83 hospital staff and three from 20 patients, all with the same phage type 77. Hospital staff and patients colonisation with a same SA strain is a potential reservoir for epidemic nosocomial infections. Prophylactic measures are hygienic measures like handwashing, but perhaps also patients and staff selective decontamination with topical antimicrobial substances.
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PMID:[Outbreak of Staphylococcus aureus infections in an intensive care unit]. 208 79

Clinical efficacy and safety of piperacillin were evaluated in 30 patients with a severe aspiration pneumonia admitted in our intensive care unit from july 1987 to december 1988. 20 women and 10 men (with a mean SAPS: 14) had a right pneumonia in 17 cases, left in 6, bilateral in 7 cases. A pathogen was isolated in 18 patients by protected distal catheterism, in 3 patients by blood cultures. 25 patients cured. However with a high isolation of Staphylococci it appears reasonable to associate piperacillin with an aminoglycoside before the obtention of bacteriological results.
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PMID:[Treatment of aspiration pneumonia with piperacillin]. 238 50

In order to determine immediate criteria of prognosis for patients with portal hypertension hospitalized for digestive hemorrhage, in an intensive care unit, 18 variables were recorded during the 24 hours following admission in 65 patients. Data related to death were age, ascites, hepatic encephalopathy, shock, active hemorrhage, acute pneumonia, decrease in prothrombin time, use of esophageal balloon tamponade, use of mechanical ventilation, number of red blood cell units transfused. Discriminant analysis yielded a linear combination of 4 variables which best separated survivors from non survivors with the following equation: F = 0.330 X hepatic encephalopathy + 0.433 X shock + 0.226 X active hemorrhage + 0.0097 X age - 0.396. The threshold decision of the hemorrhage prognosis index (HPI) was F = 0.57; 80 p 100 of all patients were correctly classified. In order to be validated, HPI was compared with a general (SAPS) and specific (Pugh's classification) scoring system, in a prospective study of 57 episodes of digestive hemorrhage. In this study, sensitivity was better with HPI than with SAPS (0.70 versus 0.45), specificity was higher with HPI than with Pugh's classification (0.86 versus 0.70). Percentage of correctly classified patients was higher using HPI (81 p. 100) than SAPS (77 p. 100) and Pugh's classification (68 p. 100). We suggest that the HPI, determined with 4 easily defined and recorded variables should be used prospectively to compare efficacy of different treatments.
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PMID:[Analysis of factors related to early mortality in digestive hemorrhage caused by portal hypertension]. 349 65

All patients with severe pneumonias (community-acquired and nosocomial) who required treatment in the intensive care unit (ICU) were included in a 3-year prospective study. Predictive factors for a fatal outcome were analyzed in 127 patients. An etiologic diagnosis was made in 70 (55.1%) patients. Culture of sputum or tracheobronchial secretions were used only as criteria for microbiologic diagnosis of Legionella pneumophila. The pathogens most frequently identified were L pneumophila, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Viruses were not detected as causative agents. A total of 54 patients died (mortality rate, 42.5%). The univariate analysis showed the following factors associated with mortality: advanced age (> or = 70 years); presence of septic shock, requirement of mechanical ventilation, and Simplified Acute Physiology Score [SAPS] index > 12 at the time of admission to the ICU or when symptoms appeared in patients already admitted to the ICU; development of any complication during ICU hospitalization; and P aeruginosa as the etiologic agent of the pneumonia. When all variables were introduced by a stepwise method, the final model included advanced age (> or = 70 years), SAPS index > 12, presence of septic shock, requirement of mechanical ventilation, bilateral pulmonary involvement, and P aeruginosa as the etiologic agent of pneumonia as prognostic factors associated with a fatal outcome.
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PMID:Prognostic factors of pneumonia requiring admission to the intensive care unit. 784 86

Systemic kinetics of three inflammatory mediators (bactericidal/permeability-increasing protein [BPI], soluble intercellular adhesion molecule [sICAM], and soluble E-selectin [sE-selectin]) were studied during the development of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) (n = 42), diagnosed on quantitative cultures of bronchoscopic samples. From a pool of collected samples, nested samples were used to measure mediators on Days -4, -2, 0, and +2, relative to diagnosis. Correlations between systemic levels of mediators and clinical severity of infection (VAP with or without severe sepsis or septic shock) and patient outcome (mortality at Day 10 after diagnosis) were studied. Predictive values of inflammatory mediators were compared with daily Simplified Acute Physiology Score II (SAPS II) values and the logarithmic number of bacteria in bronchoscopic samples. During the development of VAP, increasing SAPS II scores and rising systemic mediator levels were only found in patients in whom VAP was accompanied with severe sepsis or septic shock. Values of SAPS II and plasma levels of BPI and sE-selectin, but not sICAM, increased from the day of diagnosis on in patients who died within 10 d of diagnosis. Systemic levels of inflammatory mediators did not better predict clinical severity or patient outcome than daily SAPS II scores. The logarithmic number of bacteria in bronchoscopic samples poorly correlated with circulating levels of inflammatory mediators, severity of infection, and patient outcome. Our findings show that a clinical scoring system (SAPS II score) is at least as good as a predictor for the clinical severity of infection and patient outcome, and provide new information on the kinetics of inflammatory mediators during the development of VAP.
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PMID:Prediction of clinical severity and outcome of ventilator-associated pneumonia. Comparison of simplified acute physiology score with systemic inflammatory mediators. 976 55

The objective of this randomized study was to compare the occurrence of nosocomial pneumonia in nasotracheally intubated patients who were randomly allocated either to a systematic search of sinusitis by CT scan (study group) or not (control group). A total of 399 patients were included: 272 male and 127 female; mean age, 61 +/- 17 yr; SAPS: 12.6 +/- 4.9. The study group consisted of 199 patients and the control group consisted of 200. In the study group, sinus CT scans were performed in case of fever at Days 4 and 8 and then every 7 d. Nosocomial sinusitis was defined as follows: fever of >/= 38 degrees C, radiographic (sinusal air-fluid level or opacification on CT scan) signs, and presence of purulent aspirate from the involved sinus puncture with >/= 10(3) cfu/ml. Patients with sinusitis received sinus lavage and intravenously administered antibiotics. In the study group, 80 patients experienced nosocomial sinusitis. In the control group, no patient was treated for a sinusitis. Ventilator-associated bronchopneumonia (VAP) was observed in 88 patients: 37 in the study group (1 mo Kaplan-Meier estimate, 34%) versus 51 in the control group (1 mo Kaplan-Meier estimate, 47%); (p = 0.02, log-rank test; relative risk [RR] = 0.61; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.40 to 0.93). Two months overall mortality was estimated at 36% in the study group versus 46% in the control group (p = 0.03, log-rank test; RR = 0.71; 95% CI, 0.52 to 0.97). We conclude that the occurrence of VAP in patients undergoing prolonged mechanical ventilation via a nasotracheal intubation can be prevented by the systematic search and treatment of nosocomial sinusitis. The effect on mortality should be confirmed.
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PMID:A randomized study assessing the systematic search for maxillary sinusitis in nasotracheally mechanically ventilated patients. Influence of nosocomial maxillary sinusitis on the occurrence of ventilator-associated pneumonia. 1005 Dec 38

The aim of this study was to monitor hepatic function in patients with pneumonia meeting the sepsis criteria of the American College of Chest Physicians/Society of Critical Care Medicine (ACCP/SCCM) and to determine if hepatic dysfunction is related to the systemic inflammatory response. Twenty patients were recruited. The monoethylglycinexylidide (MEGX) test was carried out on days 1-10 after admittance to the intensive care unit. Blood samples for determination of serum concentrations of hyaluronic acid, C-reactive protein (CRP), interleukin (IL)-6, IL-8, IL-10 and conventional liver function tests (aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, bilirubin, albumin) were also drawn. Patients were classified into two groups according to illness severity estimated by the simplified acute physiology score (SAPS II) on the day of admission. Patients in group I (n=10) had a SAPS II probability of mortality >3% while those in group II (n=10) had a SAPS II < 3%. The MEGX level over the first five days was significantly lower in group I than in group II (p<0.0001). Significant inverse correlations during the first 5 days were observed between the MEGX 30 min test results and IL-6, CRP and SAPS II and more modest correlations with hyaluronic acid (p=0.0025) and IL-10 (p=0.021). The conventional liver function tests did not differ between the two groups and were mostly within the respective reference ranges. We conclude that the MEGX test is a sensitive marker of liver dysfunction early in sepsis and that low MEGX values are associated with an enhanced inflammatory response.
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PMID:The monoethylglycinexylidide (MEGX) test as a marker of hepatic dysfunction in septic patients with pneumonia. 1115 41

We investigated the usefulness and reliability of the Gram stain value versus quantitative cultures in the early diagnosis of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) using the protected bronchoalveolar lavage (PBAL). One hundred four mechanically ventilated patients (age = 52 +/- 19; SAPS II = 38 +/- 15) with a strong suspicion of VAP were consecutively included. One hundred sixteen PBAL were performed and mini-bronchoalveolar lavage were analyzed using the Gram stain standard method and the conventional quantitative culture technique. VAP diagnosis was based on a positive quantitative culture of mini-bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (cutoff > or = 10(3) CFU/mL). A final diagnosis of VAP was established in 67 patients and there was no infection in 49 cases. Regarding detection of bacteria using the Gram stain, we found a sensitivity of 76.2%, a specificity of 100%, a positive predictive value of 100% and a negative predictive value of 75.4%. There was a good agreement with the final diagnosis (kappa statistic 0.73; concordance 86.2%). The degree of qualitative agreement between Gram stain and quantitative cultures was analyzed in the VAP group: the correlation was complete in 39% (26 of 67 VAP), partial in 28% (19 of 67 VAP) and there was no correlation in 33% (22 of 67 VAP). We conclude that despite its overall "good agreement," the Gram stain is of limited use for the rapid diagnosis of VAP and unreliable for the early adaptation of empirical antimicrobial therapy when using the noninvasive PBAL procedure.
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PMID:An evaluation of the Gram stain in protected bronchoalveolar lavage fluid for the early diagnosis of ventilator-associated pneumonia. 1115 48

Bronchoscopic bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) may be followed by a systemic inflammatory response. Previous reports have suggested pneumonia as a predisposing condition and systemic cytokines as possible mediators. To test this hypothesis, systemic levels of interleukin (IL)-1beta, IL-6 and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) were studied before and at 12 h and 24 h after bronchoscopically guided BAL in 30 mechanically ventilated patients (median age 67 (range 54-76) yrs, simplified acute physiology score II (SAPS II) 33 (12-56)), 20 of whom had pneumonia and 10 of whom were control patients without pneumonia. Arterial oxygen partial pressure to inspired oxygen fraction ratio (Pa,O2/FI,O2), body temperature, mean arterial pressure, and cardiac frequency were recorded. The majority of patients (28/30, 93%) received antibiotic treatment prior to the procedure. Pa,O2/FI,O2 ratio was lower at 12 h compared to baseline in patients with pneumonia (baseline median 192 (range 65-256); 12 h 160 (66-190) mmHg, p<0.001) and ventilated controls (baseline 293 (205-473); 12 h 226 (153-330) mm Hg p=0.011), but returned to baseline levels at 24 h (pneumonia: 194 (92-312), p=0.991; controls: 309 (173-487) mmHg, p=0.785). No changes in other clinical variables were observed. Systemic TNF-alpha levels before BAL (pneumonia: 35 (10-88); controls: 17 (0-33) pg x mL(-1)) did not increase at 12 h (pneumonia: 35 (0-64); p=0.735; controls: 16 (0-21) pg x mL(-1), p=0.123 comparison to baseline) or 24 h (pneumonia: 31 (0-36), p=0.464; controls: 19 (0-43) pg x mL(-1), p=0.358). No changes of IL-1beta (baseline: pneumonia 0 (0-13); controls 1 (0-32) pg x mL(-1)) or IL-6 (baseline: pneumonia, 226 (9-4300); controls, 53 (0-346) pg x mL(-1)) were detected. No deterioration of clinical variables and no increase in systemic cytokine release has been observed after bronchoalveolar lavage, in critically ill patients. The potential cytokine increase is probably too small, in relation to the pre-existing inflammatory response, to yield clinical significance in this population otherwise antibiotic therapy may have been protective.
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PMID:Systemic inflammatory response after bronchoalveolar lavage in critically ill patients. 1133 31

The increasing number of the patients requiring admission to the intensive care unit and growing demand for the outcome analysis was noted over the last decade. The goal of this study was to evaluate the characteristics of the patients, to compare the outcome of surgical and medical patients, and to demonstrate the importance of the clinical information system in the intensive care. During 12-month period 1031 patients were enrolled for the study. Data were collected on forms and then entered into a computer program specifically designed for this study. For the overall population mean age was 63 years, Simplified Acute Physiology Score II (SAPS II)--31, and stay in the intensive care unit--4 days. The most frequent site of the intensive care unit acquired infection was respiratory, mainly pneumonia. The overall mortality in the intensive care unit was 19.4% and hospital mortality--24.8%. The mortality was directly associated with advanced age, increased SAPS II sore, and the occurrence of organ dysfunction. Medical patients in comparison with surgical patients had higher SAPS II scores (p < 0.001) and number of organ dysfunctions (p < 0.001), longer intensive care unit stay (p < 0.001) and higher mortality rate (p < 0.001). The underprediction of actual mortality by the SAPS II system was predetermined by this value of the neurological patients. The outcome of the surgical patients was good compared to the results of the studies from other countries. Clinical information system is necessary for comprehensive and objective evaluation of the intensive care unit data and quality of therapy.
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PMID:[Clinical information system and its significance in intensive care]. 1247 84


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