Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The development of malnutrition is often rapid in critically ill patients with
sepsis
and severe trauma. In such patients, a wide array of hormonal and nonhormonal mediators are released, inducing complex metabolic changes. Hypermetabolism, associated with protein and fat catabolism, negative nitrogen balance, hyperglycemia, and resistance to insulin, constitute the hallmark of this response. Critically ill patients demonstrate a marked alteration in the adaptation to prolonged starvation: resting metabolic rate and tissue catabolism stay elevated, while ketogenesis remains suppressed. The response to nutrition support is impaired. Substrate use is modified in septic and traumatized patients. Glucose administration during severe
aggression
does not suppress the enhanced hepatic glucose production and the lipolysis. This phenomenon, related to tissue insulin resistance, ensures a high flow of glucose to the predominantly glucose-consuming cells, such as the wound, the inflammatory, and immune cells, all insulin-independent cells. In addition, the elevated protein catabolism is difficult to abolish, even during aggressive nutrition support. Thus, in patients with prolonged
aggression
, these alterations produce a progressive loss of body cell mass and foster the development of malnutrition and it dire complications. In this review, the relevant physiologic data and the nutritional implications related to energy metabolism in septic and injured patients are discussed, while potential therapeutic strategies are proposed.
...
PMID:Energy metabolism in sepsis and injury. 929 Jan 9
Three patients presented with brain abscess associated with ventricular rupture. The origins of infection were
sepsis
, congenital heart disease, and unknown, and the organisms were Gram-negative cocci in one and Streptococcus species in two. Ventricular rupture occurred before administration of antibiotics and caused consciousness disturbance in all three patients. Continuous ventricle drainage was begun and antibiotics were directly administered into the ventricles. Aspiration and drainage from the abscess was also performed in two patients. Ventricular irrigation resulted in an excellent effect in one patient. The outcomes were excellent in two patients and fair in one.
Aggressive
ventricular drainage in the very early stage and direct intraventricular administration of antibiotics are very important to obtain a favorable outcome in patients with brain abscess and ventricular rupture.
...
PMID:Treatment of brain abscess associated with ventricular rupture--three case reports. 930 Dec 2
Mediastinitis occasionally develops as a complication of cervical or odontogenic infections resulting in neck
sepsis
, which spreads to the mediastinum via the cervical facial planes. Nowadays, this rare complication of pyogenic orofacial infections has an high-unchanged mortality rate. Delayed diagnosis and inadequate mediastinal drainage are the primary causes of this high mortality rate.
Aggressive
empirical antibiotic combinations should be directed towards this polymicrobial process. Antibiotic therapy alone is inadequate and the mainstay of treatment is aggressive surgical drainage through cervical and thoracic approaches. The assessment and management of the airway is critical; most authors recommend early tracheostomy in a controlled fashion in all cases of serious neck infections with or without thoracic involvement. However, we consider tracheostomy not always necessary and we only perform it in patients with severe dyspnea from upper airway obstruction.
...
PMID:Mediastinitis as a rare complication of an odontogenic infection. Report of a case. 948 42
The incidence of the
sepsis
syndrome has increased dramatically in the last few decades. During this time, we have gained new insights into the pathophysiologic mechanisms leading to organ dysfunction in this syndrome. Yet, despite this increased knowledge and the use of novel therapeutic approaches, the mortality associated with the
sepsis
syndrome has remained between 30% and 40%. Appropriate antibiotic selection and hemodynamic support remain the cornerstone of treatment of patients with
sepsis
. Recent studies have failed to demonstrate a global oxygen debt in patients with
sepsis
. Furthermore, therapy aimed at increasing systemic oxygen delivery has failed to consistently improve patient outcome. The primary aim of the initial phase of resuscitation is to restore an adequate tissue perfusion pressure.
Aggressive
volume resuscitation is considered the best initial therapy for the cardiovascular instability of
sepsis
. Vasoactive agents are required in patients who remain hemodynamically unstable or have evidence of tissue hypoxia after adequate volume resuscitation.
...
PMID:The hemodynamic derangements in sepsis: implications for treatment strategies. 974 46
Unstable fractures of the pelvic ring, associated to perineal lacerations are severe injuries occurring during high-energy trauma. High rates of septic complications and mortality have been reported with these injuries. Current treatment guidelines, while dealing with open pelvic fractures or dislocations are discussed, based on a current review of the literature and on our local experience. At our institution, 55 unstable type B or C fractures of the pelvic ring were treated by osteosynthesis between 1991 and 1997. Of these, 11 patients presented with an associated perineal laceration (20%). Simultaneously to the immediate pelvic ring fixation, a diversion colostomy was performed in all these patients. Repeated wound debridements and wide spectrum antibioprophylaxis were associated. Of these 11 patients presenting an open pelvic fracture, only one died of pelvic
sepsis
at three weeks. 10 patients survived (91%) and went on to bony union, without any local infectious complications.
Aggressive
multidisciplinary initial surgical management is a rule when dealing with this type of injuries, immediate colostomy and careful wound debridement must be associated to the initial osteosynthesis.
...
PMID:[Primary surgical care of pelvic fractures associated with perineal laceration]. 1007 30
Expression of the inhibitory factor kappaB alpha (IkappaB alpha) reflects the activity of nuclear factor kappaB(NF-kappaB) and is a powerful tool to investigate the regulation of the transcription factor within the CNS. IkappaB alpha mRNA was evaluated in the rat brain by means of in situ hybridization following different immunogenic stimuli; i.e., intraperitoneal (i.p.) and intravenous (i.v.) lipopolysaccharide (LPS), i.v. recombinant rat interleukin (IL) 1beta, IL-6, or tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and intramuscular (i.m.) turpentine injection, used here as a model of systemic localized inflammatory insult. Systemic LPS, IL-1beta, and TNF-alpha caused a rapid and transient transcriptional activation of IkappaB alpha along the blood vessels of the entire brain; the signal was very intense 30-60 min after the i.v. injections and returned to undetectable levels from 2 to 12 h depending on the challenge. Double-labeling procedure provided the anatomical evidence that IkappaB alpha-expressing cells within the microvasculature were essentially of the endothelial type, as they were immunoreactive to the von Willebrand factor. Scattered small cells were also found across the brain of LPS-, IL-1beta-, and TNF-alpha-injected rats at time 1-3 h, and microglial (OX-42)-immunoreactive cells were positive for the transcript. Such expression within parenchymal microglia was nevertheless not observed in the brain following a localized and sterile inflammatory insult. Indeed, i.m. turpentine administration stimulated IkappaB alpha transcription quite uniquely within the endothelium of the brain capillaries, an effect that paralleled the swelling of the injection site and lasted up to 24 h after the
aggression
. In contrast to these immunogenic challenges, i.v. IL-6 injection failed to activate the gene encoding IkappaB alpha in the rat brain. These results indicate that NF-kappaB may play a crucial role in specific cellular populations of the CNS to trigger transcription of immune-related genes and that IkappaB alpha resynthesis may act as a dynamic intracellular inhibitory feedback to avoid exaggeration of the response. It is possible that IkappaB alpha expression in cells of the blood-brain barrier is a general mechanism that takes place during systemic inflammation, whereas the participation of NF-kappaB-related molecules within parenchymal cells of the CNS is solicited during more severe conditions such as blood
sepsis
and endotoxemia.
...
PMID:Effects of systemic immunogenic insults and circulating proinflammatory cytokines on the transcription of the inhibitory factor kappaB alpha within specific cellular populations of the rat brain. 1038 84
Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is an inherited connective tissue disorder, a group that includes Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, Marfan's syndrome and pseudoxanthoma elasticum. OI is a heterogeneous disease of collagen I biosynthesis characterized by variable clinical phenotypes, including skeletal and cardiovascular manifestations. A 65-year-old man with OI who had extensive prior successful cardiac valve surgeries is described. He survived for 18 years after his initial valve surgery, but died of multiorgan failure and
sepsis
after repair of a spontaneous type A aortic dissection. This is the fourth reported case of aortic dissection secondary to OI and illustrates the extensive cardiovascular pathology associated with OI.
Aggressive
management of arterial dissection risk factors, such as systemic arterial hypertension, is advocated for patients with OI.
...
PMID:Aortic dissection: a rare complication of osteogenesis imperfecta. 1052 81
Transcatheter angiographic emobilisation has been used as an effective control of haemorrhage associated with pelvic fracture. Although few complications of this procedure have been reported, gluteal muscle necrosis occurs occasionally. We assessed the type of pelvic fracture, concomitant injury, embolic site, embolic materials, and outcome in cases of gluteal muscle necrosis associated with angiographic embolisation for pelvic fracture-related haemorrhage, and investigated the factors associated with the development of gluteal muscle necrosis, one of the fatal complications of transcatheter angiographic embolisation. Five out of the 151 patients (incidence, 3.3%) who underwent transcatheter angiographic embolisation for haemorrhagic shock due to pelvic fracture developed gluteal muscle necrosis after embolisation. The five cases had injury severity scores ranging from 26 to 59 (mean 46.4). Three patients died (mortality, 60%) of subsequent
sepsis
and disseminated intravascular coagulation. These cases showed that transcatheter angiographic embolisation with gelatin sponge and/or steel coil, while effectively controlling bleeding, may also result in gluteal muscle necrosis.
Aggressive
management including intraarterial antibiotic treatment may have a role, but our numbers are too small to confirm this.
...
PMID:Gluteal muscle necrosis following transcatheter angiographic embolisation for retroperitoneal haemorrhage associated with pelvic fracture. 1116 98
When faced by an external
aggression
such as shock,
sepsis
, burns or surgery, the body develops a response, known as stress, comprising hypermetabolism and hypercatabolism related to an alteration in tissue sensitivity to insulin. This alteration seems to be rooted in the transmembrane protein GLUT-4 which takes care of the cell uptake of glucose in skeletal muscle. As a result, there are alterations in the metabolism of carbohydrates, fats and proteins (reduction of immunoglobulins). In the case of surgery, it has been shown that, on the one hand, factors such as rest, pre-operative fasting or the release of inflammatory response factors constrain an even greater alteration in the sensitivity to insulin; and on the other hand that the degree of resistance to insulin depends on the magnitude of the surgery, its duration, bleeding, or on hypothermia and extracorporeal circulation in the case of heart surgery. These metabolic alterations may lead to an increase in the number of infections, mean stay in hospital, and even lead to diabetes mellitus in the long term. Over the last few years, all of this has led several researchers to try to minimize the stress response associated with planned surgery through replacing pre-operative fasting by the administration of carbohydrates, whether or not in association with insulin in perfusion. Beneficial results have been described: control of hyperglycaemia, lower consumption of neoglycogenic amino acids and less alteration of plasma immunity (interleukins, TNF). Future studies will evaluate the influence of these measures on plasma immunity, mean hospital stay and morbidity/mortality.
...
PMID:[Metabolic response to stress, can we control it?]. 1121 95
The repercussions of nutrition on the immunological system are described. The current situation is discussed with regard to the handling of the immuno-inflammatory response to
aggression
and the improvement of the immune response. The goal pursued by nutritional manipulation of the immune system is to improve the prognosis and reduce the complications in critical patients subjected to surgical or traumatic
aggression
or
sepsis
. The following points are reviewed: the importance of preserving the axis from the liver to the digestive tract, the advantages of particularly early enteral nutrition over parenteral nutrition, the substances currently considered as immunonutrients and the available clinical evidence on their use, with a series of conclusions for current decisions and future developments.
...
PMID:[Early enteral nutrition and immunonutrition]. 1122 6
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>