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)
Ninety-three postoperative patients 1 day to 13 years of age had blood cultures, limulus lysate assay, determination of fibrin degradation products, white blood cell and platelet counts. Seven groups were studied. The limulus lysate assay was often positive (64%) in the presence of gram negative
septicemia
but there were false positives and negatives. The tests for fibrin degradation products were inconsistent. The white blood cell count was low in babies with gram negative
septicemia
. One hundred per cent of the infants with gram negative
septicemia
had a platelet count below 150,000; 71% below 100,000 (average 67,000 septic babies, 257,000 non-septic babies). The drop in platelet count with gram negative
septicemia
was abrupt---as much as 222,000 in 24 hours. Platelets increased when therapy was effective. Two children with gram negative
septicemia
had platelet counts of 50,000 and 20,000. The platelet count for patients with gram positive
septicemia
was 299,000, and above 150,000 in all children with ruptured and non-ruptured
appendicitis
and major surgery without gram negative
septicemia
. It was concluded that serial measurements of platelet count in the postoperative infant and child was a rapid and reliable method for early detection of gram negative
septicemia
and changes in platelet count in response to treatment was an indicator of the effectiveness of therapy.
...
PMID:The early diagnosis of gram negative septicemia in the pediatric surgical patient. 12 47
The humoral antibody response to Bacteroides fragilis infections in humans, with particular reference to ss. fragilis, was studied using an enzyme immunosorbent assay (EIA). Phenol-water extracted polysaccharide fractions (PS) from B. fragilis ss. fragilis, ss. ovatus, ss. distasonis and ss. vulgatus were used as antigens. Antibody titer determinations were done on sera collected from 57 patients where B. fragilis had been cultured and from 50 controls. In patients with
septicemia
caused by B. fragilis ss. fragilis a significant titer increase (greater than or equal to doubling) against PS from strain 9343 was seen during the course of the illness. In sera from patients with
appendicitis
, and where B. fragilis was isolated from the appendix, a titer increase against B. fragilis ss. fragilis 9343 was observed for 6 of 17 patients. However, in sera from 9 of the 17 patients a titer increase against B. fragilis ss. ovatus was also seen. No titer increase was observed in sera from most of the patients with salpingitis where B. fragilis had been isolated. In sera from 10 patients with Crohn's disease the median antibody titer against all four B. fragilis antigens was slightly higher than in sera from the controls. The median antibody titer against B. fragilis ss. ovatus was, however, significantly higher. Our experience is that a humoral antibody response against B. fragilis ss. fragilis can be expected in patients where the organism is isolated from blood. In diseases like
appendicitis
and salpingitis titer increases are less common. When they occur they are not necessarily directed against ss. fragilis only but are as frequent against ss. ovatus. Titer increases against ss. vulgatus and ss. distasonis are also seen. This raises the question if the observed titer increases are a consequence of a specific pathogenic role of B. fragilis in these infections, or if they merely represent the result of an antigenic stimulus as a result of an increased permeability of the mucosal barriers caused by inflammation and/or surgical manipulation.
...
PMID:The humoral antibody response to Bacteroides fragilis infections in humans. 28 65
In a series of 410 consecutive potentially contaminated operations, we have compared the relative efficacy of intra-incisional cephaloridine and ampicillin in single doses of 1 g in 2 ml of water. In high risk operations (ileocolorectal surgery, perforated
appendicitis
, or when the patient has 2-5 cm or more of subcutaneous fat at the site of the incision) cephaloridine prophylaxis resulted in a primary
sepsis
rate of 14 per cent compared with 36 per cent for ampicillin. In all other patients the two antibiotics were equally effective. Secondary
sepsis
, following discharge from the wound of a substance other than pus, was equally common in the two groups.
...
PMID:Single dose intra-incisional antibiotic prophylaxis of surgical wound sepsis: a controlled trial of cephaloridine and ampicillin. 32 56
The clinical symptoms of infections with Y. ent. and pseudotub. are of a different nature. Whether the infection becomes apparent in form of a pseudo-
appendicitis
, enterocolitis or a typho-septic disease does apparently not only depend on the type of pathogens but also on the children's condition with regard to their resistance. All forms mentioned are observed in case of infections with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis as well as in case of infections with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis as well as in case of infections with Yersinia enterocolitica. However, infections with Yersinia enterocolitica seem to have more frequently a chronic course and to be accompanied by conjunctivitis, arthritis and skin diseases. For the subacute and the chronic forms of the disease, a specific treatment is not necessary in most cases. Severe enterocolitis and
septicemia
, however, need an antibiotic therapy besides the symptomatic therapy. The best antibiotics for an infection with Yersinia enterocolitica still seem to be the tetracyclines and leucomycine, for an infection with Yersinia pseudotuberculosis also the cephalosporines, ampicilline and carbenicilline.
...
PMID:Yersinia enterocolitica and pseudotuberculosis infection in children. 34 79
Solitary hepatic abscess has a favorable prognosis in contrast with multiple abscesses which generally are fatal. As compared with the classical cause of
appendicitis
, at present, abscesses are frequently related to biliary tract and diverticular disease. Occult or temporally remote processes are responsibile for many solitary abscesses. Lethality of multiple abscesses is related to fulminant hepatic and source
sepsis
, atypical syndromes, late diagnosis and difficult, complex treatment. Causative organisms are predominantly gram-negative and increasingly anaerobic, requiring special bacteriology for isolation. Various laboratory data are useful in diagnosis and prognosis, but liver scans and celiac angiography are critical procedures. Treatment aimed at lowering the mortality of multiple liver abscesses includes early diagnosis, surgical exploration and abscess drainage, direct bacterial identification emphasizing anaerobic techniques, intense specific antibiotic therapy and identification and definitive therapy of the seeding focus with special attention being given to the biliary tract.
...
PMID:Clinical aspects of grave pyogenic abscesses of the liver. 46 53
Acute appendicitis with perforation in a premature baby, weighing 1 050 g, is described. Initially the infant did well after surgery, but succumbed to
sepsis
, as a result of hyperalimentation, eleven days later. This is the smallest infant suffering from
appendicitis
reported in the English literature.
...
PMID:Acute appendicitis in a premature baby. 49 77
Abscess of the spleen is an uncommon entity that seems even less common as it still represents a diagnostic problem. The most common cause of splenic abscess is metastatic hematogenous seeding of the diseased spleen especially of the infarcted areas or traumatic hematomas. It can result also from the direct spread of infection from surrounding structures. Many patients with splenic abscess have a rapidly progressive generalized
sepsis
and even the combination of well-timed surgery and antibiotic therapy is not always curative. Local symptoms may be mild and overlooked and there may be only general symptoms of suppuration present. X-rays investigations often yield valuable information about the location of the abscess. By far the most promising technique is splenic scanning with the use of radioisotopes. Our case of splenic abscess following
appendicitis
has been described. The course and the diagnosis has been established using liver-spleen scanning. The patient was treated with Obracin and Dalacin and the diseased spleen has been removed. After drainage of the left subphrenic abscess the recovery was uneventful.
...
PMID:[Spenic abscesses]. 51 22
An analysis was made of the author's own patients with diffuse perforative peritonitis (without
appendicitis
) in childhood. Most patients had a perforated enterocolitis. Treatment of choice: Resectioning the perforated areas of the intestine or Resectioning the intestine just before the perforation; anastomosis in the septic area should not be carried out, instead an enterostomy with two lumina should be performed; intensive therapy; therapy for
sepsis
with exchange transfusion. The reanastomazation should take place only after the patient has fully recovered; definite criteria for evaluation, when this is the case, were presented. The mortality rate for the author's cases was 46%; statistics taken from international literature indicate a mortality rate of 65%.
...
PMID:[Problems of enterectomy for diffuse peritonitis in children (author's transl)]. 56 41
The charts of 68 patients from 65 to 99 years of age who underwent appendectomy for
appendicitis
were reviewed between 1964 and 1976. Thirty-three were men and 35 women. All patients underwent appendectomy. Four patients had normal appendices. The remainder had
appendicitis
; 74% were ruptured. The duration of symptoms varied greatly, and was related to outcome. The mean duration was 58 hours, but both those who died and those who suffered complications had significantly longer mean duration while those who had an uncomplicated course had a shorter mean duration of symptoms. The incidence of rupture rose from 60% in those seen with symptoms less than 48 hours to 90% in those with symptoms longer than 49 hours. Delay was invariably related to delay in seeking medical treatment. In no case was the patient under the care of another physician for an extended period of time. Pain was the chief complaint in 63 patients, and was present in all. Seventy-four per cent had fever and 78% had leukocytosis. Those with normal appendices had normal white blood cell counts. Right lower quadrant tenderness was present in 80%. Thirty-nine per cent had significant additional medical problems. Most (73%) had operation within six hours of their original evaluation, and yet the overall complication rate was 34% including six deaths. Delay during evaluation did not correlate with unsatisfactory outcome as did delay in seeking medical attention. The most common complications were due to infection. In at least three of the deaths wound infection was associated with
sepsis
and death. Delay in seeking medical care, advanced age, and underlying problems were the most significant factors in those who died.
...
PMID:Appendicitis in the elderly. 64 78
Consecutive patients undergoing emergency appendectomy (283) or urgent cholecystectomy (51) were prospectively studied for the development of post-operative incisional or peritoneal
sepsis
. Severity of the original peritoneal infection was carefully recorded, while use of a Penrose dam to drain the peritoneum was randomized according to pre-assigned hospital number. Both aerobic and anaerobic cultures were taken from the abdomen at the time of operation as well as from all postoperative infectious foci. Results demonstrated no essential differences in incidence of wound and peritoneal infection following appendectomy for simple or suppurative
appendicitis
(187) or following cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis (51). However, with gangrenous or perforative
appendicitis
(94), incisional and intra-abdominal infection rates were 43% and 45%, respectively, when a drain was used; yet only 29 and 13%, respectively, without a drain. These latter differences were significant (p < 0.001). In addition, intra-abdominal abscesses were three times as likely to drain through the incision than along any tract provided by the rubber conduit. Cultures revealed that hospital pathogens accounted for a greater proportion of wound and peritoneal
sepsis
after cholecystectomy and appendectomy for simple or suppurative
appendicitis
if a drain had been inserted than if managed otherwise. By contrast, a mixed bacterial flora was responsible for most infections following appendectomy for gangrenous or perforated
appendicitis
, irrespective as to use of a drain.
...
PMID:Abdominal drainage following appendectomy and cholecystectomy. 64 99
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>