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

The clinical presentation, course and outcome of Yersinia enterocolitica infection was studied prospectively in 125 children. Enteric forms occurred in 114 children (92 enteritis, 20 pseudoappendicitis, 2 chronic ileitis), of whom 17 also had extramesenteric manifestations; 11 children had one or more extramesenteric forms without enteric disease. Enteritis occurred more frequently in young children whereas serious forms and extramesenteric forms were more common in children older than 6 years of age (P < 0.001). Arthritis was observed in 13 children and extensive lymphadenopathy in 11; 1 child had septicemia with pleurisy, 1 had vasculitis, 1 had cholecystitis and 4 had erythema nodosum. Diagnosis was established by positive culture in 100 (80%) children and by agglutinin test in 11 of 45 (24%), demonstration of circulating specific anti-IgA and anti-IgG to Yersinia outer membrane proteins in 47 of 48 (98%) and detection of antigen in biopsies in 28 of 33 (85%) children. The 2 latter methods were superior to the agglutinin test. Serotype O3 and O9 predominated. The frequency and seriousness of complications may justify the use of antibiotics for Yersinia enteritis in children 6 years of age or older.
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PMID:Yersinia enterocolitica infection in children. 855 26

Progressive liver failure in parenteral nutrition (PN)-dependent children with short bowel syndrome carries significant morbidity and mortality. The authors retrospectively reviewed 47 consecutive patients with short bowel syndrome diagnosed from October 1985 through October 1995. All patients were treated according to a protocol designed to promote intestinal motility and discourage bacterial translocation. Elements of the protocol included the use of taurine, vigilant prevention and aggressive treatment of sepsis, meticulous catheter care, early PN cycling, appropriate enteral feeding, and measures designed to inhibit gastrointestinal bacterial translocation, especially gram-negative rods. Complete blood counts and serum liver function studies were compiled from both clinic visits and hospital admissions for each patient every 3 to 6 months while they were on PN. Three patients were lost to follow-up after they had moved out of state. The length of time on PN ranged from 3 months to 9.4 years with an average of 2.2 years. Elevated aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), and glutamyltransferase (GGT) were present in 82%, 66%, and 84% of patients, respectively. Alkaline phosphatase was elevated in 58% of patients. Eight patients (18%) are still on PN, and 31 (70%) have been weaned off PN. Five patients have died (11%). Three patients (7%) developed cholecystitis requiring cholecystectomy. No patients developed progressive liver failure. These results suggest that PN-related liver failure may be prevented in most patients with short bowel syndrome. Specific measures to prevent PN-related cholestatic jaundice need further investigation.
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PMID:Prevention of liver failure in parenteral nutrition-dependent children with short bowel syndrome. 909 21

Thirty-one patients with biliary enteric fistula who were operated on over a 19-year period (1976-1994) with an incidence of 0.74% in all biliary tract operations were reviewed retrospectively to identify etiologic factors, types of fistulas, signs and symptoms, methods of diagnosis, management and prognosis of the cases. Most common symptoms were abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and jaundice. Two patients had gallstone ileus. The majority of the patients had severe concomitant medical illnesses. The exact preoperative diagnosis of a biliary enteric fistula was established in only five (16%) patients. In 81% of the cases fistula was secondary to chronic calculous biliary tract disease. Postoperative complications included wound infection in six (19%), biliary fistula in two (6%) and erosive gastritis in one (3%) patient. Two patients died of intra-abdominal sepsis and two of cardiac failure, with an operative mortality of 13%. Early elective cholecystectomy is recommended to avoid complications of chronic calculous cholecystitis such as bilioenteric fistulas and their increased mortality and morbidity.
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PMID:Biliary enteric fistulas. 937 75

In this prospective multicenter study, the effect of early ERCP within 72 hours after the beginning of symptoms in the treatment of acute biliary pancreatitis was investigated. 100 patients with acute biliary pancreatitis but without biliary sepsis or obstructive jaundice were randomized in this trial. 48 patients of the invasive group received urgent ERCP within 72 hours after the beginning of pain. 52 patients of the conventional group received ERCP only if biliary sepsis or obstructive jaundice occurred during the clinical course of the disease (which was the case in 10 patients). Sphincterotomy and stone extraction were undertaken if bile duct stones were identified during ERCP. In the invasive group, ERCP was successfully performed in 44 cases (92%). In 19 of these patients (43%), common bile duct stones were identified and a sphincterotomy was performed. The stones could be removed completely during the first ERCP examination in 16 cases. In the conventional group, 2 patients died from pancreatitis within 3 months, versus 4 patients in the invasive group. Cholecystitis occurred significantly more often in the conventional group (11 versus 4; odds ratio OR = 5.1), but no patient with cholecystitis or cholangitis died. Cholangitis (OR = 3.3) and sepsis (OR = 3.5) were slightly more frequent in the conventional group (not significant) while renal failure (OR = 0.5) and pulmonary failure (OR = 0.8) were slightly more frequent in the invasive group (not significant). Jaundice (6 patients) only occurred in the conventional group. In this multicenter study, it is concluded that early ERCP is not superior to conventional treatment in patients with acute biliary pancreatitis. On the other hand, patients with biliary complications (jaundice, sepsis, cholangitis) should receive urgent ERCP. However, most bile duct stones which initiate a pancreatitis pass spontaneously into the duodenum. The vast majority of patients suffering from biliary pancreatitis without biliary sepsis or obstructive jaundice require only elective ERCP when remaining bile duct stones are assumed. The lethality of biliary pancreatitis without initial biliary complications (sepsis, jaundice) tends to be elevated rather than diminished by emergency ERCP.
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PMID:Urgent ERCP in all cases of acute biliary pancreatitis? A prospective randomized multicenter study. 938 73

Patients subjected to surgery often develop nosocomial infections, among which the intra-abdominal ones stand out as being a common cause of septicemia, multi-organ failure, and death of the critical patients. Advances have been made in the study of the physiopathology by studying the mediators which are responsible for the systemic inflammatory response, the microbiology (changes in the pathogen type and in the antimicrobial sensitivity), and for the clinical picture (cholecystitis, tertiary peritonitis). Abdominal ultra-sound and computerized axial tomography have contributed greatly to the diagnosis of these infections. The new treatment techniques are discussed, both of the drainage of the septic focus (percutaneous or surgical), as of the antimicrobial treatment and the supportive measures. The diagnostic and therapeutic advances have modified the prognosis of these patients, although this continues to be poor when there is development of the multi-organ failure syndrome.
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PMID:[Postoperative infections in critically ill patients]. 941 79

Acute cholecystitis is a common disease which may carry the risk of complications, including empyema, perforation, abscess, peritonitis and sepsis. Percutaneous transhepatic drainage of the gallbladder (PTGBD) with antibiotics can provide prompt decompression of gallbladder in acute cholecystitis and interrupt the natural history of the disease effectively. From July 1986 to June 1996, 154 patients with acute cholecystitis were reviewed retrospectively in Kaohsiung Medical College Hospital. The chief symptoms and signs were pain (98.1%), fever (57.1%) and jaundice (37.7%). WBC count more than 10,000 was noted in 116 (75.3%) patients. Associated diseases included empyema: 42 (27.3%), septic shock: 14 (9.1%), diabetes mellitus: 13 (8.4%), pancreatitis: 10 (6.5%), perforation: 7 (4.5%), liver cirrhosis: 6 (3.9%) and respiratory failure: 1 (0.6%). All of them underwent ultrasound-guided PTGBD immediately after the diagnosis was established. The symptoms and signs disappeared soon after this procedure. Bacterial culture was found positive in 104 (67.5%) of 154 patients in which Escherichia coli (51.9%) was the most common organism, followed by Klebsiella pneumonia (20.2%). After acute stage, 138 patients obtained the cholangiography via PTGBD tube. Gallbladder stones were only noted in 56 (40.6%) patients, gallbladder stone concomitant with common bile duct stone in 26 (18.8%), cystic duct obstruction in 25 (18.1%), acalculous cholecystitis in 21 (15.2%), gallbladder perforation in 1 (0.7%), choledochocyst in 1 (0.7%), and cholecystocolonic fistula in 1 (0.7%). There were 135 patients to undergo surgery after the clinical condition was stable. The operative findings included gallbladder stones only in 88 (65.2%), gallbladder stone concomitant with common bile duct stone in 34 (25.2%), acalculous cholecystitis in 13 (9.6%), choledochocyst in 1 (0.7%), and cholecysto-colonic fistula in 1 (0.7%). The postoperative complications included wound infection 8 (5.9%), UGI bleeding 3 (2.2%), acute renal failure 1 (0.7%) and acute respiratory failure 1 (0.7%). The postoperative mortality rate was 0.7% (1/135), which was much lower than those of previous reports, which not undergoing PTGBD initially. It led us to conclude that PTGBD, as an initial preoperative modality to treat acute cholecystitis, is effective in decreasing postoperative morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Ultrasound-guided percutaneous transhepatic drainage of gallbladder followed by cholecystectomy for acute cholecystitis--10 years' experience. 951 85

We report a 61-year-old Japanese man who died of complications of esophagus cancer surgery. He was well until his 55 years of the age, when he had an onset of speech disturbance and hand writing. He was seen by a neurologist who prescribed Menesit 600 mg/day. His symptoms improved with this medication. In 1993, three years after the onset, he started to show gait disturbance and easy to fall. In 1995, he noted difficulty in eye opening. He visited our clinic on October 26, 1996. On examination, he showed vertical gaze paresis, masked face, nuchal rigidity, small step gait, freezing phenomena, and festination. His mental status was normal. He was treated with 800 mg/day of Menesit, 800 mg/day of L-dops, and 10 mg/day of bromocriptine with little improvement in his symptoms. Cranial CT scan revealed some dilatation of the third ventricle. Subsequent clinical course was one of the slow progression of his parkinsonism. In September of 1997, he noted difficulty in swallowing. He was admitted to the gastrointestinal service of our hospital on October 14, 1997. On admission, neurologic status was essentially similar to the previous one, but he showed more advanced state of his parkinsonism. Upper gastrointestinal series revealed a mass lesion of about 11.5 cm in length protruding into the lower esophagus lumen. Subtotal esophagus resection including the mass was performed on December 2, 1997. The stomach was elevated for anastomosis with the upper esophagus. No metastases were found in the mediastinum except for two lymph nodes in the para-esophageal region. The subsequent course was complicated by marked elevation of GOT, GPT, LDH, total bilirubin as well as direct bilirubin, alkaliphosphatase, and amylase starting in the evening of the surgery. On December 7, leukocytosis and pneumonic shadow were seen involving his right lung. On December 10, he developed cardiopulmonary arrest. He was once resuscitated; however, he developed cardiac arrest again seven hours later and pronounced dead. He was discussed in a neurologic CPC. The chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had PSP and the cause of the death was ascribed to circulatory disturbance to the liver. The discussant also thought that the terminal course was complicated by cholangitis or cholecystitis, sepsis, and pulmonary embolism. Surgical specimen of the esophagus tumor revealed carcinosarcoma. Postmortem examination revealed yellowish discoloration of the peritoneum and mesenterium, and accumulation of clouded ascites indicating the presence of peritonitis. Inflammatory change extended to the mediastinum. On microscopic examination, various kinds of bacilli and candida spores were seen. The liver was enlarged and a perforation was noted in the gallbladder causing biliary necrosis in the adjacent liver. An extensive infarct was seen in the left lobe of the liver; this was found to be due to obstruction of the hepatic artery at the site of the duodenohepatic mesenterium and obstruction of intrahepatic portal vein secondary to retrograde intrahepatic cholangitis in the left lobe. A piece of surgical threads was seen adjacent to the hepatic artery; foreign body granulomatous reaction was seen surrounding the surgical thread. The rupture of the gallbladder appeared to be due to the obstruction of the left branch of the hepatic artery. Neuropathologic examination revealed extensive degeneration of the pallidum, the substantia nigra, and the subthalamic nucleus and presence of neurofibrillary tangles in the remaining neurons. The neuropathologic findings were consistent with progressive supranuclear palsy, although the pathologic changes in the midbrain tegmentum was only mild gliosis.
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PMID:[A 61-year-old man with progressive gait disturbance, freezing, and vertical gaze paresis who developed esophagus cancer]. 986 33

The early stages of acute acalculous cholecystitis (ACC) have been difficult to investigate due to the animal models developed and utilized over the past years. A new model of animal AAC induced by intra-abdominal sepsis is presented. Under general anesthesia 35 guinea pigs underwent laparotomy. The designed model included ligation and prick of the caecum in 25 animals (group A), while 10 animals served as control group (group B). Seven days after these experimental procedures animals underwent relaparotomy and were submitted to cholecystectomy and sacrifice. Histological studies of the specimen revealed various degrees of cholecystitis in all the gallbladders of survived animals from group A. Gallbladders of animals from group B were histologically normal. Gallbladder bile of 15 survived animals from group A were cultured. Bile cultures were negative in 10, while culture of gallbladder bile were positive in 5; the pathogen cultured were Streptococcus Faecalis and Streptococcus Sp. The results of this study suggest that intra-abdominal sepsis induces gallbladder inflammation of various degrees. This directly supports the theoretical relationship indicating that sepsis and shock could produce AAC. Moreover this model proved that AAC, in early stages, is primarily induced by inflammatory processes, while infection of the bile do represent a late event.
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PMID:[The histopathological and microbiological aspects in a model of acute acalculous cholecystitis: an experimental study]. 1002 36

Miliary tuberculosis is a rare form of tuberculosis in industrialized countries. We report on a 69-year-old woman presenting a sepsis syndrome caused by cryptic miliary tuberculosis clinically mimicking a case of cholecystitis with sepsis. The patient died of a multi-organ failure on day 6 of her hospital stay.
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PMID:A case of cryptic miliary tuberculosis mimicking cholecystitis with sepsis. 1002 8

Plesiomonas shigelloides, a member of the family Vibrionaceae, is a Gram negative rod associated with several gastroenteritis outbreaks, especially in tropical and subtropical countries. In same way, it has been related to some septicemia, meningitis and cholecystitis cases. The microorganism is normally found in water, fish and birds. The aim of this work was to study the incidence of Plesiomonas shigelloides in tetrahybrids of Oreochromis sp. (Pink Tilapia) located at the central region of Venezuela. Once the samples were homogenized, the techniques of enrichment and direct streaking were used simultaneously for the isolation of the microorganism. A high incidence of P. shigelloides was determined (73%), being higher in the intestinal tract (60%), followed by the skin (36.7%) and the gills (26.67%), without any correlation among them. In the fish pond, the microorganism isolation frequency was 41.67%. The direct streaking technique presented the highest isolation values in the different Tilapia tissues (60%) and in the water as well (41.60%). No significant differences were observed on the effectivity of the selective agars used for the isolation of P. shigelloides (Plesiomonas Agar and Inositol-Brilliant Green-Bile Salts Agar). A positive correlation was observed between the microorganism incidence and the pluviosity levels. A high incidence of E. coli was observed in the samples of Tilapia tissues and the water pond. No correlation was observed between incidence of P. shigelloides and E. coli. Due to the high prevalence of P. shigelloides found in the present study, it is important to assure a proper evisceration, washing and storage at temperatures lower than 8 degrees C, and a proper product cooking to diminish the customeris risk.
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PMID:[Incidence of Plesiomonas shigelloides in tilapia tetrahibrids (Oreochromis sp.)]. 1041 9


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