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)
This is a case of postoperative Legionella pneumonia in a full-term infant with hypoplastic left heart syndrome. The infant had an uncomplicated prenatal history, normal vaginal delivery, Apgars of 8 at 1 and 5 minutes, but was cyanotic at birth. At 3 days of age she had a stage 1 Norwood surgical procedure to palliate her congenital heart disease. A synthetic patch was placed over the thoracic midline because of difficulty in reapposing the sternum. Peritoneal dialysis was used to manage renal failure. At 20 days of age she had disseminated intravascular
coagulopathy
and pneumonia associated with
sepsis
. Four days later she died. Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 was isolated from a lung culture taken at autopsy.
...
PMID:Fatal postoperative Legionella pneumonia in a newborn. 235 3
Polycystic liver disease (PLD) associated with autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease is usually well tolerated. However there is a small subset of patients who become incapacitated by massive liver enlargement and for whom effective nonsurgical therapy is limited. Recent surgical advances in the treatment of PLD have raised uncertainties regarding proper management of these highly symptomatic patients. We have reviewed our recent experience with a combined hepatic resection-fenestration procedure to assess its efficacy in nine patients. All patients underwent resection of two or more liver segments and extensive fenestration of residual cysts in the remnant liver. Symptomatic relief and reduction in abdominal girth were obtained in eight surviving patients, persisting for an average follow-up period of 17 months. No progression of cystic disease has been observed clinically or by computed tomography and hepatic function was preserved. Three patients had no complications. Five patients had complications including transient right pleural effusion (3) and thrombosis of an arteriovenous fistula (2). One patient who had a previous hepatic cyst fenestration and a cadaveric renal transplantation died after operation of an intracerebral hemorrhage after experiencing
coagulopathy
, hyperbilirubinemia, and
sepsis
. Our results suggest (1) some highly symptomatic patients with massive PLD may benefit from combined hepatic resection and fenestration with acceptable risk, and (2) previous liver surgery and immunosuppressive therapy may increase the risk of such surgery. Longer follow-up is needed in a larger number of patients to determine the duration of benefit from the combined resection-fenestration procedure for highly symptomatic PLD.
...
PMID:Treatment of highly symptomatic polycystic liver disease. Preliminary experience with a combined hepatic resection-fenestration procedure. 236 1
Forty-two (14%) of 306 patients with liver injuries presenting to Westmead Hospital over a 10-year period required hepatic resection as their definitive treatment. Two types of resection were performed: Resectional debridement utilized the plane of injury as the line of resection while anatomical resection utilized anatomical planes. Resectional debridement was used in 35 patients. In 29, the major technical problem was bleeding and 21 of these patients had associated hepatic vein injuries. In 5, the major problem was devitalized parenchyma, and, in 1, it was an intrahepatic bile duct injury. Anatomical resection was performed in 7 patients: 3 with bleeding, 2 with devitalized parenchyma, and 2 with intrahepatic bile duct injuries. Overall, 15 patients died (36%). The most common cause of death was bleeding in 9 of the 15 patients. Survivors spent a median of 32 days in hospital (range: 11-162 days) and sustained a median of 2 complications (range: 0-6). The most common complications were respiratory infection and/or failure,
coagulopathy
, and
sepsis
. Resection successfully addressed bleeding, devitalized parenchyma, and intrahepatic bile duct injuries with an acceptable mortality in critically ill patients who would otherwise have died.
...
PMID:The role of hepatic resection in the management of blunt liver trauma. 238 52
The timing of renal transplantation in infants is controversial. Between 1965 and 1989, 79 transplants in 75 infants less than 2 years old were performed: 23 who were 12 months or younger, 52 who were older than 12 months; 63 donors were living related, 1 was living unrelated, and 15 were cadaver donors; 75 were primary transplants and 4 were retransplants. Infants were considered for transplantation when they were on, or about to begin, dialysis. All had intra-abdominal transplants with arterial anastomosis to the distal aorta. Sixty-four per cent are alive with functioning grafts. The most frequent etiologies of renal failure were hypoplasia (32%) and obstructive uropathy (20%); oxalosis was the etiology in 11%. Since 1983 patient survival has been 95% and 91% at 1 and 5 years; graft survival has been 86% and 73% at 1 and 5 years. For cyclosporine immunosuppressed patients, patient survival is 100% at 1 and 5 years; graft survival is 96% and 82% at 1 and 5 years. There was no difference in outcome between infants who were 12 months or younger versus those who were aged 12 to 24 months; similarly there was no difference between infants and older children. Sixteen (21%) patients died: 5 after operation from
coagulopathy
(1) and infection (4); and 11 late from postsplenectomy
sepsis
(4), recurrent oxalosis (3), infection (2), and other causes (2). Routine splenectomy is no longer done. There has not been a death from infection in patients transplanted since 1983. Rejection was the most common cause of graft loss (in 15 patients); other causes included death (with function) (7), recurrent oxalosis (3), and technical complications (3). Overall 52% of patients have not had a rejection episode; mean creatinine level in patients with functioning grafts is 0.8 +/- 0.2 mg/dL. Common postoperative problems include fever, atelectasis, and ileus. At the time of their transplants, the infants were small for age; but with a successful transplant, their growth, head circumference, and development have improved. Transplantation in infants requires an intensive multidisciplinary approach but yields excellent short- and long-term survival rates that are no different from those seen in older children or adults. Living donors should be used whenever possible. Patients with a successful transplantation experience improved growth and development, with excellent rehabilitation.
...
PMID:Renal transplantation in infants. 239 87
Peripartum cardiomyopathy is a syndrome of undetermined etiology whose most common initial symptoms are those of congestive heart failure. The syndrome carries a five-year mortality estimated at 40%. Single noxious factors, such as viral infection, have been proposed as direct precipitants of this syndrome, but none have been conclusively linked to it. The cases of two patients with identifiable cardiac stress factors who developed peripartum cardiomyopathy are presented here: one with
sepsis
complicated by disseminated intravascular
coagulopathy
and severe anemia, and a second with an otherwise normal pregnancy who engaged in strenuous aerobic exercise throughout the last trimester. A review of previously published cases reveals the frequent association of multiple nonspecific cardiac stress factors that may predispose women to peripartum cardiomyopathy. Various cardiac stress factors may act synergistically with the stress of pregnancy to precipitate peripartum cardiomyopathy in susceptible women.
...
PMID:Peripartum cardiomyopathy. A role for cardiac stress determinants other than pregnancy? 252 36
Clostridial infections usually occur in association with trauma, malignancy, or intra-abdominal disease. A 72-year-old previously healthy man presented with abdominal distress and fever. He developed a hemolytic anemia,
coagulopathy
, and fulminant clostridial
septicemia
. The patient died less than 24 hours after presentation. At autopsy, no malignancy was detected. The patient had an acute clostridial hepatic abscess and multiple arteriovenous malformations (vascular ectasias) of the large and small bowel. The case suggests that these mucosal and submucosal vascular lesions, which usually cause hemorrhage, may also predispose to infection.
...
PMID:Fatal Clostridium perfringens septicemia associated with gastrointestinal arteriovenous malformations (vascular ectasias). 254 Jul 27
Renal autotransplantation with/without extra-corporeal surgery was performed in 53 patients between September, 1975 and december, 1987. Original disease was obstructive disease of the upper urinary tract in 25 patients, renovascular hypertension and renal vascular disease in 13, renal calculous disease in 12 and renal cell carcinoma in 3. Ten of the 53 patients had solitary kidneys. Three patients died on 14, 21 and 49 postoperative days of massive bleeding with disseminated intravascular
coagulopathy
caused by the rupture of transplant arterial anastomosis (1 patient with urinary obstructive disease) and
sepsis
caused by wound infection (2 patients with renal calculous disease). Two kidneys were removed on operative day and 8 postoperative days due to arterial thrombosis in 2 patients with aneurysm of intrarenal artery. The deterioration of renal function was observed in previously damaged kidneys of two patients with extensively damaged ureter. No other severe complications were observed. In 23 of 24 patients with the obstructive disease of the upper urinary tract, disappearance or improvement of the obstructive change was observed after surgery. All 5 patients with renovascular hypertension showed normo-tension without administration of antihypertensive drugs after surgery. In 3 of 5 patients with an aneurysm of the intrarenal artery, the aneurysm was removed and reconstruction of the artery was performed successfully. Two patients with arterio-venous fistula and one patient with nut cracker syndrome had no severe hematuria with bladder tamponade after surgery. Ten of 12 patients with renal calculous disease were treated successfully without residual calculi by this procedure. Three patients who had solitary kidney with renal cell carcinoma were treated successfully by this procedure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Renal autotransplantation and extra-corporeal surgery]. 265 70
In the period between 15/12/1987 and 15/08/1989, ten patients with either fulminating or subfulminating hepatitis have been treated by orthotopic liver transplantation (O.L.T.). Six patients are doing well in the post-operative period with a mean follow-up of 12 months (7-23 months). No evidence of neurological sequelae has been observed and recurrence of HB virus infection was absent from the three cases who survived hepatitis B transplantation. Four out these ten patients died after initial successful O.L.T... One patient succumbed 7 days after O.L.T. from
sepsis
or early super-acute rejection, the second 21 days after O.L.T. from neuromeningeal listeria, the third 43 days post O.L.T. from acute rejection, while the fourth developed cytomegalovirus pneumonia and died 61 days after O.L.T. Orthotopic liver transplantation has become the treatment of fulminating hepatitis. It is an emergency which is usually accompanied by successive difficulties in decision making: indication criteria, then acceptance or refusal of ABO incompatible grafts (5/10) and of suboptimal donors. Orthotopic liver transplantation for fulminating hepatitis is technically easy to perform, but usually requires the use of extra-corporal veno-venous circulation. Accompanying intensive medical care is essential and usually includes one or multiple plasmaphereses to correct existing
coagulopathy
without any fluid or sodium overload to the circulation.
...
PMID:[Fulminant and subfulminant hepatitis treated by orthotopic transplantation of the liver. Apropos of 10 cases]. 270 Jan 60
We reviewed in retrospect the records of all patients at our institution in whom peritoneovenous shunts were placed to manage refractory ascites due to chronic liver disease from 1977 through 1986. There was a wide spectrum of underlying liver disease in these 23 patients; most frequent was alcoholic cirrhosis. Five were in modified Child's class A, 14 were in class B, and four were in class C. Fourteen of 23 patients had some complication associated with peritoneovenous shunt placement; clinical consumptive
coagulopathy
, infection, and gastrointestinal hemorrhage while hospitalized were most frequent. Fifteen of 23 died, 12 while hospitalized or within 1 month of hospitalization. Death in eight patients appeared to be related to shunt placement and was due to
sepsis
in five, hepatorenal syndrome with an obstructed shunt in one, consumptive
coagulopathy
in one, and pulmonary edema in one. All modified Child's class C patients, six of seven patients with clinical consumptive
coagulopathy
, and all patients with a preshunt total bilirubin greater than 3.7 mg/dl died while hospitalized or within 1 month of hospitalization. This review supports studies showing that placement of peritoneovenous shunts for refractory ascites has a high morbidity and mortality in patients with advanced liver disease, and does not support their use in the management of refractory ascites.
...
PMID:Poor outcome from peritoneovenous shunts for refractory ascites. 271 11
Incidence, risk factors and morphological features of the intravascular coagulation (IC) in 160 women who had died during pregnancy, after abortion and delivery were studied. IC was established in 118 (73.8%) of them. The main risk factors leading to IC were shock (59.3%),
sepsis
(28.8%), toxemia of pregnancy (incl. eclampsia) (25.4%), Caesarean section (19.5%), fetal death in utero (12.7%), amniotic fluid embolism (9.3%), and abruptio placentae (7.6%). Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) was established in 66% of the cases, and local intravascular coagulation (univisceral localisation of microthrombi) in 28%. In the resting 6% of the cases there was consumptive
coagulopathy
without microthrombi. Lungs, pituitary gland, uterus, kidneys and adrenals were the most frequently affected organs. Necrosis in the parenchymal organs, hyaline membrane formation in the lungs and consumptive
coagulopathy
were particularly frequent in the cases with DIC. The leading causes of death were acute renal failure and ARDS. It was established that prolonged intensive care including artificial ventilation, massive blood transfusion, as well as surgical treatment, aggravate the course and morphological features of IC.
...
PMID:Intravascular coagulation in relation to pregnancy and delivery. 281 60
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>