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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A rare autopsy case of primary squamous cell carcinoma of the thyroid gland is reported herein. A 61-year-old Japanese woman with a swelling of the left neck underwent surgery and the resulting tumor was histopathologically diagnosed as pure squamous cell carcinoma of the thyroid gland. She had had the nodule for 20 years, and it was histologically diagnosed as having been a well-encapsulated, follicular adenoma. Histopathological observation of the resected glands also revealed the coexistence of pure squamous cell carcinoma, which presumably originated from the adenoma. Postoperatively, an esophagotracheal fistula formed due to local invasion of the tumor cells. The patient's state gradually deteriorated and she died of severe bronchopneumonia and renal dysfunction, 4 months after the operation. Autopsy revealed no distant metastases, but severe
septicemia
caused by
bacterial infection
affecting the systemic organs was found, which presumably resulted in multiple organ failure.
...
PMID:Pure squamous cell carcinoma of the thyroid gland--report of an autopsy case and review of the literature. 317 90
This prospective study was performed to determine the frequency of unexplained unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia associated with
bacterial infection
during the first week of life. Of 5805 infants delivered between September 1984 and December 1986, 93 jaundiced newborns without evidence of
septicemia
fulfilled the following criteria to be enrolled in the study: weight greater than 2500 g, gestational age greater than 38 weeks, age less than 7 days, and unexplained unconjugated bilirubin greater than 170 mumol/L (greater than 10 mg/dL) during the first 48 hours of life and/or greater than 255 mumol/L (greater than 15 mg/dL) thereafter. Evaluation for
septicemia
included blood and urine cultures, and white cell and thrombocyte counts. The study disclosed three (3.2%) infants who developed
septicemia
before any clinical suspicion had been aroused. It is concluded that bacterial infections should be considered a possible cause of neonatal unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia during the first week of life, regardless of the clinical condition of the infant.
...
PMID:Unexplained neonatal jaundice as an early diagnostic sign of septicemia in the newborn. 323 1
The value of quantitatively determined C-reactive protein (CRP), measured from a finger prick sample for rapid detection of
septicemia
, was examined in 76 blood culture-positive infections in 54 immunocompetent and 18 compromised children; 73 patients with systemic viral infections served as controls. Development of a positive CRP reaction was also studied in 40 cases of acute epiglottitis. Beyond the neonatal age, an increased CRP value (greater than or equal to 20 mg/L) was found in 60 of 64 (94%) children with a positive blood culture for bacteria or fungus. By contrast, CRP remained below this value in 56 of 73 (77%) with viral infections. The immunologic status did not influence the CRP response. However, time had a highly significant (p less than 0.001) effect on CRP; a history of 6 to 12 hours of illness was required before CRP increased above normal. We conclude that CRP is a sensitive and rapidly reacting index in bacteremic infections. However, because other factors than
septicemia
also increase CRP, we deem a negative CRP value most informative; if two determinations taken several hours apart are less than 20 mg/L, the patient is very unlikely to have invasive
bacterial infection
.
...
PMID:C-reactive protein in early detection of bacteremic versus viral infections in immunocompetent and compromised children. 326 35
Bacterial infection
of the mammalian bloodstream can lead to overwhelming
sepsis
, a potentially fatal syndrome of irreversible cardiovascular collapse (shock) and critical organ failure. Cachectin, also known as tumour necrosis factor, is a macrophage-derived peptide hormone released in response to bacterial lipopolysaccharide, and it has been implicated as a principal mediator of endotoxic shock, although its function in bacterial
sepsis
is not known. Anaesthetized baboons were passively immunized against endogenous cachectin and subsequently infused with an LD100 dose of live Escherichia coli. Control animals (not immunized against cachectin) developed hypotension followed by lethal renal and pulmonary failure. Neutralizing monoclonal anti-cachectin antibody fragments (F(ab')2) administered to baboons only one hour before bacterial challenge protected against shock, but did not prevent critical organ failure. Complete protection against shock, vital organ dysfunction, persistent stress hormone release and death was conferred by administration of antibodies 2 h before bacterial infusion. These results indicate that cachectin is a mediator of fatal bacteraemic shock, and suggest that antibodies against cachectin offer a potential therapy of life-threatening infection.
...
PMID:Anti-cachectin/TNF monoclonal antibodies prevent septic shock during lethal bacteraemia. 331 66
Urinary infections, with a spectrum from covert bacteriuria to severe pyelonephritis, commonly complicate pregnancy. Serious infections follow untreated silent bacteriuria in a fourth of cases, and routine screening can be justified in high-risk populations, particularly those from lower socioeconomic strata. Despite an initial salutary response to a number of antimicrobial regimens, covert bacteriuria recurs in one-third of treated women whose risk of pyelonephritis remains at 25%. Acute cystitis may be unrelated to these other infections and responds readily to a number of regimens; however, single-dose therapy is not recommended since early pyelonephritis can be mistaken for uncomplicated cystitis. Pyelonephritis is the most common severe
bacterial infection
complicating pregnancy. These women are frequently quite ill, and hospitalization is recommended. Since 85% to 90% respond within 48 hours to intravenous fluids and antimicrobials, continued fever and evidence of
sepsis
after two or three days should prompt a search for underlying obstruction. Perhaps 20% of women with severe pyelonephritis develop complications that include septic shock syndrome or its presumed variants. These latter include renal dysfunction, haemolysis and thrombocytopaenia, and pulmonary capillary injury. In most of these women, continued fluid and antimicrobial therapy result in a salutary outcome, but there is occasional maternal mortality.
...
PMID:Urinary tract infections complicating pregnancy. 333 Apr 91
We prospectively examined whether febrile infants younger than 2 months of age who were defined as being at low risk for having
bacterial infection
could be observed as outpatients without the usual complete evaluation for
sepsis
and without antibiotic treatment. A total of 237 previously healthy febrile infants were seen at the Pediatric Emergency Room over 17 1/2 months. One hundred forty-eight infants (63%) fulfilled the criteria for being at low risk: no physical findings consisting of soft tissue or skeletal infections, no purulent otitis media, normal urinalysis, less than 25 white blood cells per high-power field on microsopic stool examination, peripheral leukocyte count 5000 to 15,000/mm3 with less than 1500 band cells/mm3. One infant appeared too ill to be included, and had
sepsis
and meningitis. None of the 148 infants at low risk had bacterial infections, versus 21 of 88 (24%) of those at high risk (P less than 0.0001); eight of 88 (9%) had bacteremia. Of the 148 infants classified as being at low risk for having
bacterial infection
, 62 (42%) were discharged to home, and 72 (49%) were initially observed for less than or equal to 24 hours and then discharged. Seventeen infants (11%) were hospitalized: in six, low risk became high risk; six had indications other than fever; and five because the study physicians could not be found. The 137 nontreated infants were closely observed as outpatients. The duration of fever was less than 48 hours in 42%, and less than 96 hours in 91%. All infants were observed for at least 10 days after the last examination. The fever resolved spontaneously in all infants but two, with otitis media, who were treated as outpatients. Our data suggest that management of fever in selected young infants as outpatients is feasible if meticulous follow-up is provided.
...
PMID:Ambulatory care of febrile infants younger than 2 months of age classified as being at low risk for having serious bacterial infections. 334 73
Recurrent pyogenic cholangitis (RPC) is characterized by repeated attacks of
bacterial infection
of the biliary tract by enteric organisms resulting in formation of strictures and stones in the intrahepatic as well as the extrahepatic bile ducts. Between 1973 and 1984, we managed ten children with RPC. Presentation was acute,
septicemia
being invariably present. Four children responded to vigorous intravenous (IV) fluid and antibiotic therapy; of these, three subsequently required elective transduodenal sphincteroplasty. Six children required emergency biliary tract decompression surgically and three of them also had concomitant definitive drainage procedures (transduodenal sphincteroplasty, two; supraduodenal choledochoduodenostomy, one). The other three had T-tube drainage initially followed by elective drainage procedures (transduodenal sphincteroplasty, one; supraduodenal choledochoduodenostomy, two). At exploration, pigment stones and/or mud were invariably present in the bile ducts. One child required reexploration for hemostasis following sphincteroplasty, and one child died from
septicemia
and respiratory failure following operation. The rest are well, having been followed for 3 to 12 years. Major advances in recent years include (1) endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP) for accurate definition of the biliary tract and confirmation of the presence and location of stones during the quiescent phase, (2) the intraoperative choledochoscopic extraction of intrahepatic and extrahepatic stones, and (3) postoperative stone removal via the T-tube tract.
...
PMID:Childhood recurrent pyogenic cholangitis. 337 49
To examine the possible pathophysiologic role of circulating immune complexes in patients with cystic fibrosis and other inflammatory lung diseases, we studied the reticuloendothelial clearance of IgG-sensitized autologous erythrocytes in 15 patients with cystic fibrosis, 6 with chronic obstructive lung disease not related to cystic fibrosis, 7 with immunodeficiencies, 5 with systemic lupus erythematosus, 4 who had previously undergone a splenectomy, and 10 normal subjects. Patients with chronic inflammation and recurrent infections (i.e., those with cystic fibrosis, chronic obstructive lung disease, and immunodeficiencies) had significantly faster clearance rates (P less than 0.05, less than 0.01, and less than 0.005, respectively) than normal subjects. In contrast, patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (a classic immune complex-mediated disease) and those who had undergone a splenectomy had delayed clearance. The accelerated reticuloendothelial clearance in patients with chronic inflammatory pulmonary disease associated with cystic fibrosis was similar to that observed in stimulated laboratory animals. The rapid clearance rate may account for the rareness of
septicemia
in such patients despite chronic, persistent local
bacterial infection
.
...
PMID:Reticuloendothelial clearance in cystic fibrosis and other inflammatory lung diseases. 339 95
Plasma fibronectin levels and complete blood cell counts were assessed prospectively among 100 infants less than 3 months of age with the provisional diagnosis of "possible sepsis". Seven of the ten infants with culture-proved bacteremia, meningitis, or urinary tract infection had low plasma fibronectin levels as did 12 (13%) of 90 infants with superficial or no documented
bacterial infection
. The positive predictive value of a low plasma fibronectin level in conjunction with leukocytosis and elevated band ratio for discriminating serious
bacterial infection
was 71%. Normal white blood cell counts or fibronectin level alone or in combination predicted the absence of serious
bacterial infection
with an accuracy of at least 94%. Plasma fibronectin determination provides a useful adjunct to the complete blood cell count for the rapid evaluation of extent of illness in young infants with possible
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Role of fibronectin in diagnosing bacterial infection in infancy. 339 79
During a 19-month period we determined the incidence of
bacterial infection
among 39 patients treated with desferrioxamine who had end-stage renal disease and were undergoing maintenance hemodialysis. Twenty-three received desferrioxamine because of aluminum-related bone disease, and 16 because of iron overload. A control group of 193 patients on maintenance hemodialysis but without desferrioxamine was used. No difference was found in the incidence of
septicemia
or of all bacterial infections between the patients with aluminum-related bone disease treated with desferrioxamine and the control patients (0.12 vs. 0.12
septicemia
per patient-therapy-year, p greater than 0.05; 0.23 vs. 0.26 bacterial infections per patient-therapy-year, p greater than 0.05). The incidence of
septicemia
in patients treated with desferrioxamine for iron overload, however, was almost three times that in the control patients (0.36 vs. 0.12
septicemia
per patient-therapy-year, p less than 0.01). To assess the effect of iron overload itself, we determined the frequency of
bacterial infection
in patients on regular hemodialysis who have never received desferrioxamine. These were subdivided into three groups according to serum ferritin level which indicated normal or low iron stores (Group I: serum ferritin 10-330 micrograms/l, n = 125), moderate (Group II: serum ferritin 331-1000 micrograms/l, n = 49) or more advanced iron overload (Group III: serum ferritin 1001-2000 micrograms/l, n = 10). Compared to patients with normal or low serum ferritin levels (Group I), we found a significantly higher rate of
bacterial infection
among patients in Group II compared with Group I (0.18 vs. 0.34 infections per patient-therapy-year, p less than 0.05) and Group III compared with Group I (0.18 vs. 0.58 infections per patient-therapy-year, p less than 0.01). These results suggest that treatment with desferrioxamine does not favour the development of
septicemia
or
bacterial infection
independently of iron overload and that iron overload itself may predispose patients on regular hemodialysis to
bacterial infection
.
...
PMID:Iron overload, but not treatment with desferrioxamine favours the development of septicemia in patients on maintenance hemodialysis. 345 53
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