Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 53-year-old woman, 11 years after a renal transplant on chronic immunosuppression, presented with a sudden onset of a painless left groin mass. Ultrasound revealed a 3 cm common femoral artery pseudoaneurysm and a 3 cm saccular aneurysm of the infrarenal aorta. Operative repair was excision and patch angioplasty of the aortic aneurysm with internal iliac artery and interposition grafting of the femoral artery aneurysm with saphenous vein. Postoperatively, Candida albicans was identified in the aortic and common femoral arterial cultures. Candida infections often occur in patients with impaired cellular immunity due to seeding from urinary tract infections, vascular catheters, or manipulation of the gastrointestinal tract. Our patient, without any prior history of a fungal infection, had undergone a colonoscopy 3 weeks earlier. Without any other possible source being identified, the proposed mechanism for fungal entry into the vascular system was via the gastrointestinal tract, with seeding from the portal venous system. The exact medical and surgical management of these patients remains undefined, and a transplant vascular registry is really needed. However, immunocompromised solid organ transplant recipients undergoing gastrointestinal endoscopic procedures may be at a greater risk for the development of subsequent septicemia. Further reports are really needed to confirm the possible need in these patients for both periprocedural antibiotic and antifungal prophylactic coverage.
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PMID:Candida arteritis: are GI endoscopic procedures a source of vascular infections? 865 31

Treatment of mycotic aortic aneurysm by excision and extraanatomic bypass is difficult to apply when the infectious process involves the visceral arteries. On the basis of experimental studies in our laboratory that demonstrated prolonged antistaphylococcal activity of rifampin-bonded, gelatin-impregnated Dacron grafts after implantation in the arterial circulation, this conduit was successfully used for in situ replacement of a native aortic infection in two patients. Both patients had fever, leukocytosis, abdominal or back pain, and a computed tomographic scan that demonstrated contained rupture of a mycotic aneurysm. Preoperative computed tomography-guided aspiration and culture of periaortic fluid from one patient grew Staphylococcus aureus. Treatment consisted of prolonged (6 weeks) culture-specific parenteral antibiotic therapy, excision of involved aorta, oxychlorosene irrigation of the aortic bed, and restoration of aortic continuity by in situ prosthetic replacement. A preliminary right axillobifemoral bypass was performed in the patient who had an infection involving the suprarenal and infrarenal aorta. In both patients intraoperative culture of aorta wall recovered S. aureus. Patients were discharged at 20 and 21 days. Clinical follow-up and computed tomographic imaging of the replacement graft beyond 10 months after surgery demonstrated no signs of residual aortic infection. In the absence of gross pus and frank sepsis, the use of an antibiotic-bonded prosthetic graft with antistaphylococcal activity should be considered in patients who have arterial infections caused by S. aureus when excision and ex situ bypass are not feasible.
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PMID:In situ repair of mycotic abdominal aortic aneurysms with rifampin-bonded gelatin-impregnated Dacron grafts: a preliminary case report. 880 70

A 43-year-old woman was admitted with peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAD), pelvis-type. The angiography showed a high-grade stenosis of the aortal bifurcation. A percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) in "kissing-balloon-technique" was performed. After 7 days the patient developed a sepsis with distinct back-pain. The ultrasound-B-scan and CT-scan of the abdomen showed the development of an infrarenal aortic aneurysm during a period of 29 days. Bacterial infection of the aorta was considered to be the reason of development of the aneurysm occurred. Immediate antibiotic therapy got the patient afebrile after 14 days. We implanted an aortobiiliacal Dacron graft 2 weeks later. The follow-up time was without complications except for two thrombotic occlusions of the graft after 4 and 19 months. Thrombectomy was carried out in both cases without complications.
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PMID:[Aortitis and development of an aneurysm after PTA of distal aortic stenosis]. 896 56

Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) is characterized by systemic endotoxemia immediately after its onset as well as the systemic release of proinflammatory cytokines, including tumor necrosis factor-alpha and the interleukins 1 and 6. Recent studies document that increased morbidity and mortality rates correlate with elevated systemic concentrations of these proinflammatory cytokines during adult and neonatal sepsis, following thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair, as well as following CPB. These proinflammatory cytokines induce increased neutrophil and endothelial surface adhesive molecule expression, thereby promoting enhanced neutrophil-endothelial adherence. Increased neutrophil-endothelial adherence and subsequent neutrophil organ binding are thought to be a "final common pathway" of organ injury during clinical inflammatory conditions. Proinflammatory cytokines also increase cellular expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase, thus increasing cellular production of nitric oxide, a known inflammatory mediator. This review discusses recent evidence of the adverse effects of proinflammatory cytokine release during CPB and therapeutic modalities that can reduce the systemic concentrations of these mediators of inflammation.
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PMID:The influence of cardiopulmonary bypass on cytokines and cell-cell communication. 916 6

The use of balloon dilation to treat native aortic coarctation is controversial, particularly in infants. Between January 1991 and September 1996, 12 patients < or = 3 months of age with native coarctation of the aorta (CoA) underwent balloon angioplasty (BA). All 12 lesions were dilated successfully with a mean reduction in peak systolic gradient from 49.3 +/- 16.5 mm Hg to 6.8 +/- 4.0 mm Hg (p < 0.001) and a mean increase in minimum CoA diameter from 2.4 +/- 0.6 mm to 5.5 +/- 1.3 mm (p < 0.001). Intimal flaps or tears were detected immediately after BA in 4 (33%) of 12 patients by angiography and in 8 (89%) of 9 patients by intravascular ultrasonography. No deaths or major complications related to the BA occurred. One patient had documented asymptomatic femoral artery obstruction, and one patient with hydrops fetalis and congenital pleural effusions died with gram-negative sepsis 1 week after the procedure. Follow-up was available for 10 patients (1 was lost to follow-up) between 2 months and 4.1 years (mean 2.4 +/- 1.3 years) after BA. No patient had an aortic aneurysm. Restenosis occurred in 5 (50%) of 10 patients, requiring reintervention a mean of 2.6 +/- 2.1 months after BA. One patient underwent surgical repair. Repeat BAs were performed in the other four patients; three were successful, and one with partial gradient relief required surgical repair. Five patients have not required reintervention a mean of 2.9 +/- 1.0 years after the initial BA. Among these five patients, follow-up intravascular ultrasound performed in three patients a mean of 2.0 +/- 1.9 years after BA showed favorable endovascular remodeling. There was a tendency for early reintervention in patients < 1 month of age and coexistence of a patent ductus arteriosus at the time of BA. In conclusion, selected infants < or = 3 months of age with discrete native CoA may be treated initially with balloon dilation. Most patients who have restenosis respond successfully to repeat BA.
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PMID:Balloon angioplasty of native aortic coarctation in infants 3 months of age and younger. 939 4

Aorto-esophageal fistula due to ruptured thoracic aortic aneurysm is very rare but is associated with extremely high mortality. An 81-year-old woman was admitted due to repeated hematemesis. Endoscopic examination revealed ulceration with blood clot on the mid-esophagus and compression of an extra-esophageal mass. The thoracic CT scan revealed an aorto-esophageal fistula due to a ruptured descending thoracic aortic aneurysm. Surgery was performed on April 3, 1996. We report an aorto-esophageal fistula managed successfully in one stage by resection and replacement of the aortic aneurysm with a prosthetic graft and total esophageal resection. The esophagus was reconstructed using orthotopic gastric interposition with omentopexy around the prosthetic aortic graft. The postoperative course was uneventful and there have been no signs of mediastinal sepsis, graft infection or pyothorax 12 months postoperatively. We suggest that the resection of both the aneurysm and the esophagus as well as the immediate reconstruction of the esophagus by orthotopic gastric interposition to obliterate the retrosternal space are important technique in the management of intrathoracic infections.
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PMID:[Successful management of aorto-esophageal fistula due to rupture of thoracic aortic aneurysm in an elderly patient]. 978 81

Over the last 10 years there have been substantial changes in the issues confronting intensivists and surgeons caring for critically ill patients. A substantial increase in the number of elderly patients with surgical illness and complex co-morbidity has accompanied the increase in the proportion of elderly in populations in the developed world. This phenomenon has been seen particularly with sepsis. Incidence rates for blunt trauma have declined overall, but the problems of the elderly trauma patient have become more evident. Major elective surgery remains a common indication for short-term intensive care in many countries, but the need for cost-containment has led to increased use of high-dependency care for many such patients. Expectations of both society and clinicians have increased, and this has been reflected in the increased demand for complex procedures (e.g., liver transplantation, cerebral artery aneurysm clipping, aortic aneurysm repair) in patients previously considered at too high risk. Along with these expectations have come pressures on clinicians to reduce costs at the same time as improving clinical outcomes. Despite many advances in the care of critically ill patients with injury or sepsis, mortality, morbidity, and cost remain high; and nutritional support is frequently required. The duration and extent of the metabolic changes seen in response to critical surgical illness and intensive care treatments have become better characterized. Although some of the changes in body water and fat are modifiable, loss of large amounts of (functional) protein has been resistant to various strategies so far studied.
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PMID:Overview of modern management of patients with critical injury and severe sepsis. 1077 17

The clinical and pathologic features of 15 primary urethral melanomas occurring in patients (nine women and six men) age 44 to 96 years (mean age, 73 yrs) are described. In the men the tumor involved the distal urethra. In eight women it involved the distal urethra, usually the meatus; both the distal and proximal urethra were involved in one woman. The tumors were typically polypoid and ranged from 0.8 to 6 cm (mean, 2.6 cm) in maximum dimension. A vertical growth phase was present in all tumors, with a prominent nodular component in seven of them. A radial growth phase was seen in nine tumors. The depth of invasion ranged from 2 to 17 mm. The tumors had diffuse, nested, storiform, or mixed growth patterns. The neoplastic cells typically had abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm, large nuclei with prominent nucleoli, and brisk mitotic activity. Melanin pigment was seen in 12 tumors but was conspicuous in only six. At the time of diagnosis, 13 tumors were confined to the urethra and two patients had lymph node metastasis. Nine patients died of disease 13 to 56 months after initial diagnosis and treatment, and one patient had a local recurrence at 4 years and subsequently died of sepsis 1 year later. Three patients were alive and well at 11 months, 23 months, and 7 years. One patient died at the time of the initial operation, and one died of a ruptured aortic aneurysm at 3 years without evidence of melanoma at autopsy. Primary malignant melanomas of the urethra, one fifth of which are amelanotic, must be included in the differential diagnosis of a number of primary neoplasms that involve the urethra, including transitional cell carcinoma, sarcomatoid carcinoma, and sarcomas. Conventional prognostic factors, such as depth of invasion or tumor stage, do not seem to play as important a role in predicting survival as the mucosal location and the nodular growth present frequently in these tumors.
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PMID:Primary malignant melanoma of the urethra: a clinicopathologic analysis of 15 cases. 1084 80

The results of recent anticytokine trials for sepsis syndrome have been disappointing. Several Phase II and Phase III clinical trials have shown a modest benefit in various subsets of patients; however, there has been no reported benefit in the primary endpoint of 28-day all-cause mortality. The failure of these trials is clearly multifactorial, and causes include the overall complexity of the inflammatory response, heterogeneity of the patient populations, absence of a hypercytokine response at the time of drug treatment, and the relatively short half-life of the administered drugs. The failure of anticytokine therapies may represent inadequate application of the treatment modality rather than any inherent weakness of the treatment itself. We have recently initiated a Phase I clinical trial examining the role of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 during surgical repair of a thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm. This study may overcome some of the-design limitations of previous anticytokine trials in sepsis, and serve as a paradigm for future anticytokine therapy trials. Although the incidence of thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysms is relatively low, the patient population is homogeneous and the surgical injury associated with its repair reproducible. Additionally, postoperative mortality and morbidity rates are significant. Most importantly, the operative repair is associated with an obligatory visceral ischemia and reperfusion injury that appears to be associated with a proinflammatory cytokine response and postoperative organ dysfunction. IL-10 is a pleuripotent anti-inflammatory cytokine that both inhibits TNFalpha and IL-1 synthesis, and antagonizes their actions through upregulation of cytokine antagonists. Furthermore, IL-10 administration has been associated with only minimal adverse side effects during Phase I and Phase II trials.
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PMID:Anticytokine therapies for acute inflammation and the systemic inflammatory response syndrome: IL-10 and ischemia/reperfusion injury as a new paradigm. 1084 28

When one is faced with impending rupture, repair of an aortic aneurysm cannot be delayed. In the presence of coexisting intra-abdominal sepsis, traditional therapy would call for aneurysm exclusion and axillofemoral bypass grafting. Consequences of this choice of treatment include limited long-term graft patency and recurrent prosthetic infection. Autogenous deep veins from the lower extremities have demonstrated exceptional patency and resilience to infection when used to replace infected aortic grafts. We now report a case of concomitant open drainage of a pancreatic abscess and repair of a saccular abdominal aortic aneurysm using the superficial femoral-popliteal vein as a conduit.
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PMID:Repair of a saccular aortic aneurysm with superficial femoral-popliteal vein in the presence of a pancreatic abscess. 1110 95


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