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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In 717 endoscopic papillotomies there were 52 complications in 48 patients, requiring 15 emergency operations with 11 deaths. Surgical intervention was undertaken in six patients for cholangitis after obstruction by stone, in four for retroperitoneal perforation, in two each for bleeding or jamming of the dormia basket, and in one for pancreatitis. Cause of death was very poor general condition or age over 80 years in four; retroduodenal abscess in four; haemorrhagic pancreatitis in two, and cholangiogenic sepsis in one.
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PMID:[Treatment of complications after endoscopic papillotomy (author's transl)]. 30 39

The hospital records of 870 consecutive patients undergoing elective biliary tract operations during an eight year period were reviewed. Bacteriologic cultures of the biliary tract obtained on 451 patients were correlated with specific biliary tract abnormalities and with postoperative complications. The incidence of positive biliary tract cultures was higher in patients with common duct disease than in those with chronic gallbladder disease without common duct disease. Choledocholithiasis and partial obstruction of the common duct are viewed as important factors in causing a high incidence of postive biliary tract cultures. Eighty-eight per cent of patients who had undergone previous biliary tract decompression procedures had positive cultures. There was no difference in the yield of postive cultures taken from the gallbladder wall and the gallbladder bile. Forty-nine per cent of patients with common bile duct disease and positive biliary tract cultures had no history of clinical cholangitis. Postoperative wound infections were more common in patients with common duct disease. The microorganism responsible for postoperative cholangitis and septicemia can usually be cultured from the biliary tract at operation. Antibiotics significantly decreased the incidence of postoperative cholangitis and septicemia.
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PMID:The relationship between biliary tract infections and postoperative complications. 34 78

A patient operated upon for acalculous cholecystitis was later found to have Caroli's disease, congenital ectasis of intrahepatic bile ducts. Cholangitis, calculi and abscesses occurred in both lobes of the liver. Sepsis was not controlled despite open drainage, hepatic segmentectomy and ductal lavage with antibiotics and saline. At autopsy the liver contained a dozen unsuspected cavities filled with calculi, bile and pus. Diagnosis of Caroli's disease is best made by operative cholangiography in patients with atypical biliary disease. Management with antibiotics alone is seldom successful. Hepatic resection is better than drainage procedures for unilateral lesions. In patients with bilateral abscesses and no extrahepatic ductal obstruction or dilation, surgical treatment is often ineffective.
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PMID:Caroli's: a surgical challenge. 42 75

The reported complication rate from T-tube infusion of sodium cholate for dissolution of retained biliary stones is low. Among 84 patients reported in the English-language literature, and 10 additional cases of our own, there have been no deaths, an incidence of liver enzyme elevation in 7%, fever in 5%, cholangitis in 2%, and pancreatitis in 2%. Recently, we have infused 100mM sodium cholate at 30 cc/hr into patients through transhepatic biliary stents in an effort to rid the intrahepatic biliary tree of retained stones and biliary sludge. Appropriate precautions were taken to prevent increased biliary pressures by the insetion of a 30 cm manometer into the perfusion system. During four transhepatic infusions in three patients, all experienced nausea and vomiting, and two of the three patients developed diarrhea and abdominal pain. Liver enzymes became elevated during all four infusions, and two of the three patients became septic and died shortly after their infusions. Experimental work in animals suggests that intrahepatic sodium cholate infusion results in injury to the ductal epithelium and predisposes patients to bactermia and sepsis. Even though T-tube infusion of sodium cholate into the common bile duct is well tolerated, direct infusion into the intrahepatic biliary tree through a transhepatic tube is not and carries a high risk of sepsis and death.
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PMID:Sodium cholate dissolution of retained biliary stones: mortality rate following intrahepatic infusion. 43 6

The Chiba technique of percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography (PTC) can be easily learned and does not require much technical equipment; it is thus widely used now in the diagnosis of suspected obstructive jaundice. The procedure is generally regarded as safe; thus standby availability of a surgical outfit is not considered to be necessary. However fever, cholangitis, septicemia, biliary peritonitis and bleeding have been reported in patients who underwent PTC. A case report is given of a patient who had biliary peritonitis following PTC, in order to demonstrate the need for careful selection of patients undergoing this procedure. PTC should not be done in patients with coagulopathy, cholangitis and known allergic reactions against the cntrast medium to be injected. If a dilated duct can be visualized bile should be aspirated and only small amounts of contrast medium be injected. If extrahepatic biliary obstruction has been diagnosed or if the patient complains about pain after the procedure surgery should be done within 24 hours.
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PMID:[Biliary peritonitis after percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography with the Chiba technique (author's transl)]. 48 Oct 59

Acute obstructive suppurative cholangitis is a potentially lethal complication of biliary tract obstruction, caused by passage of septic material into the circulation originating from pus under tension in the biliary ducts. Of the three cases presented herein, decompression occurred spontaneously in the second one, and was achieved surgically in the other two. The diagnosis is based in Charcot's triad of: Abdominal Pain, Fever and Jaundice, with or without history of biliary disease. Progression leads to septicemia, shock and death. Treatment is surgical and it should be carried out as soon as the diagnosis is made. Effective decompression of the biliary tract is obtained by cannalization of the choledoccus with a T-Tube. Delayed treatment increases mortality, thus the importance of early recognition.
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PMID:[Acute obstructive suppurative cholangitis]. 61 39

Choledochoduodenostomy was performed in 100 patients for calculus related disease of the common bile duct. There were no significant early or late complications of the anastomotic procedure. The 3 per cent mortality was related to antecedent advanced liver disease in two instances and, in one instance, to intra-abdominal sepsis. The surgical bypass has the advantage of circumventing the retained stone problem or the sequelae of benign obstructive disease in the distal part of the choledochus. It permits postoperative roentgenographic and endoscopic evaluation of the anastomotic site. Cholangitis, blind segment disability and malfunction have not been seen with these indications and this technique. When the common bile duct is at least 1.4 centimeters wide, primary or secondary choledochoduodenostomy with a wide anastomosis has significant advantages over T-tube intubation in the therapeutic and prophylactic management of choledocholithiasis.
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PMID:Choledochoduodenostomy as an adjunct to choledocholithotomy. 61 88

Cholangitis with polymicrobial sepsis followed endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography in a patient without biliary tract obstruction. Inadequately disinfected endoscopy equipment was strongly implicated as the source of infection. Results with a new method of disinfection using gluteraldehyde are given.
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PMID:Polymicrobial sepsis following endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. 80 1

Ninety-two patients with suppurative cholecystitis operated on as emergency cases were studied in retrospection. Obstructive cholangitis was seen in two, who eventually died. The mortality after cholecystectomy alone was related to the presence of stones in the common bile duct. The mortality after cholecystostomy alone was related to shock and septicemia, but not to the presence of common bile duct stones or obstructive cholangitis. It was concluded that suppurative cholecystitis with accompanying common bile duct stones should be treated with cholecystectomy and choledocholithotomy, because of the lower rate of reoperations and possibly lower mortality than after cholecystectomy alone; an exception should be made in patients with deterioration in clinical condition or patients in whom technical difficulties develop during the operation. These patients should be subjected to a cholecystostomy as the only emergency procedure.
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PMID:Reappraisal of surgery for suppurative cholecystitis. 84 20

Liver biopsy was done at the time of operation in 125 consecutive upper abdominal procedures to assess the incidence of unsuspected or undiagnosed hepatic abnormalities. Specifically excluded were hepatic lesions unexpectedly identified at laparotomy. Sixty-seven percent of the liver biopsy specimens were abnormal, the most frequent findings being fatty metamorphosis, cholestasis, triaditis, fibrosis, inflammatory infiltrate, cholangitis, cirrhosis, and hepatitis. The most frequent operation performed was cholecystectomy. In 63 patients with chronic cholecystitis, there was a 51% incidence of abnormal liver histology, while in nine patients with acute cholecystitis, the incidence was 78%. In 83% of all other operations, abnormal liver biopsy specimens were identified. Bile leakage, hemorrhage, and infection did not occur in this series, despite inclusion of patients with severe biliary obstruction, abnormal clotting factors, and intra-abdominal sepsis. New techniques of histochemical enzyme analysis and electron microscopy are expected to enhance the clinical correlation of occult hepatic lesions. We conclude that liver biopsy in a safe, informative adjunct to all upper abdominal procedures.
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PMID:'Routine' liver biopsy in upper abdominal surgery. 88 45


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