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)
Severe neutropenia, in the absence of generalized bone marrow
depression
, is a rare complication in adults receiving chrysotherapy for rheumatoid arthritis and has not been described in children. Isolated, severe neutropenia developed in five children with systemic onset JRA while they were receiving gold injections. This potentially fatal complication occurred within eight weeks of beginning therapy in four patients, and after 24 weeks of well-tolerated therapy in the fifth. Leukopenia preceded neutropenia in two children. Localized infection was successfully treated in one child;
septicemia
was fatal to a second child. Neutropenia resolved within eight to 14 days of its onset in the four survivors; chelation with dimercaprol in one child did not appear to alter the recovery time. It is suggested that a systemic onset of JRA in children less than 6 years of age identifies a higher risk group developing severe neutropenia during chrysotherapy. Cessation of gold therapy upon recognition of a decreasing neutrophil count may prevent or ameliorate a developing neutropenia; careful observation for, and early treatment of, infection may alter its outcome.
...
PMID:Neutropenia associated with chrysotherapy for juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. 10 49
A 4 7/12-year-old Caucasian female with a history of "croup-like symptoms" and persistent airway obstruction, was found to have a primary lymphosarcoma by biopsy at the time of laryngoscopy and bronchoscopy. No metastatic disease was found. After an induction course of vincristine, prednisone and local irradiation, she received CNS prophylaxis with intrathecal methotrexate and cranial irradiation. Maintenance therapy, administered over a 2 3/4 year period, consisted of cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, and 6-mercaptopurine. Excluding the diagnostic evaluation, she was hospitalized only once for the management of suspected
sepsis
, gastrointestinal ulceration and severe bone marrow
depression
. Since discontinuing treatment 27 months ago, she has remained free of disease.
...
PMID:Primary lymphosarcoma of the larynx in a child. 10 77
Five patients received overdoses of vincristine ranging from 3.5 to 32 mg. Neurotoxicity accounted for most of the complications observed. Peripheral neuropathies, cranial nerve palsies, paralytic ileus, atony of the bladder, hypertension, hypotension, seizures, inappropriate ADH secretion, and severe bone marrow
depression
were all encountered. Two patients died within 72 hours of the overdose. Another patient died of
sepsis
22 days after the overdose. Two patients recovered and were discharged. The three patients who survived longer than a few days showed improvement in the vincristine-induced neuropathy, and the two long-term survivors had essentially complete recovery. It appears that if a patient can be supported through the critical period following an overdose, he can be expected to recover normal neurologic function.
...
PMID:Overdosage with vincristine. 18 48
Clinical investigations of infants hospitalized with botulism demonstrate a remarkable uniformity of complaints and physical findings. Constipation precedes a course of progressive weakness and cranial nerve dysfunction. Examination reveals hypotonia, hyporeflexia, and a variable pattern of involvement of the motor cranial nerves. Initial laboratory investigations should include electrodiagnostic tests, because findings of an incremental response to rapid, repetitive nerve stimulation and of brief, small-amplitude motor units on electromyography are virtually pathognomonic of botulism in the infant. Differential diagnosis includes disorders that may produce generalized
depression
of the central nervous system, such as
septicemia
, meningitis, metabolic disturbances, and intoxications. Specific involvement of the neuromuscular system includes acute polyneuropathies, diseases of the anterior horn cell, congenital myopathies or muscular dystrophy, and neonatal myasthenia gravis. Recent studies have expanded the clinical spectrum of infant botulism to include some cases of sudden infant death syndrome and otherwise nonspecific constipation.
...
PMID:Differential diagnosis of infant botulism. 23 67
Peritonitis in rats was produced by cecal ligation and puncture. Sixteen hours following cecal ligation and puncture, the gangrenous cecum was removed and the animals received either 4 ml saline (nontreated), 0.75 ATP-MgCl2 (100 mumoles ATP plus 50 mumoles MgCl2), and 2.0 ml of 50% glucose or 2.0 ml of 50% mannitol and 1.25 ml saline. Two hours after the removal of the cecum, RES function was evaluated by measuring the intravascular clearance of a 131 I triolein-labeled gelatinized test lipid emulsion. The intravascular half-time (t1/2) in the nontreated animals was double that of sham-operated animals, suggesting that significant
depression
in RES function occurred during
sepsis
. Administration of ATP-MgCl2 plus glucose following
sepsis
resulted in t1/2 values similar to those of sham-operated animals, indicating that the impairment of pagocytic activity of the RES was reversed with treatment. The beneficial effect of treatment following
sepsis
does not appear to be due to hypertonicity, since administration of 50% mannitol failed to decrease the t1/2. The precise mechanism of the beneficial effect of ATP-MgCl2 + glucose on restoration of RES function is not known.
...
PMID:Impairment of reticuloendothelial system function with sepsis and its improvement with ATP-MgCl2 plus glucose administration. 26
Reticuloendothelial system (RES)
depression
has been correlated with diminished resistance to trauma, shock, and
sepsis
in man and animals. Previous studies have related the
depression
of RES hepatic Kupffer cell phagocytic function after trauma to diminished bioassayable opsonic activity. The present study determined if the loss of biological activity and RES alteration correlated with immunoreactive serum opsonic alpha 2 SB glycoprotein levels after trauma. Serum opsonic activity was measured by liver slice bioassay, and immunoreactive opsonic protein was measured by rocket electroimmunoassay. RE function was determined by colloid clearance over a 24-hour post-trauma period. Anesthetized rats (250-300 gm) subjected to sublethal or severe (greater than LD50) whole-body NCD trauma were the shock models investigated. Immunoreactive levels in 63 rats prior to injury were 518 +/- 24 microgram/ml. Neither biological nor immunoreactive levels were altered over 24 hours in anesthetized sham-traumatized controls. Temporal alteration in the initial decrease and recovery pattern of biologically active and immunoreactive opsonic protein levels significantly correlated following both sublethal and severe injury. Moreover, the patterns of immunoreactive levels of the opsonic protein correlated with the functional phagocytic activity of the RES as determined by vascular clearance of a test dose of blood-borne radiolabeled particulates. This glycoprotein falls after trauma, and the magnitude and duration of the decline increases with severity of injury. Immunoreactive opsonic alpha 2 SB glycoprotein appears to be an accurate measurement of circulating opsonic activity and RE Kupffer cell function after trauma, especially with respect to clearance. Thus, immunoreactive opsonic protein warrants clinical consideration as a noninvasive measure of reticuloendothelial systemic defense in patients after trauma and burn.
...
PMID:Immunoreactive serum opsonic alpha 2 sb glycoprotein as a noninvasive index of RES systemic defense after trauma. 26 6
Numerous studies have demonstrated that reticuloendothelial system (RES)
depression
induced by colloid blockade increases susceptibility to circulatory shock following trauma and
sepsis
. Recent data have suggested that this may relate to the failure of the RES to clear potentially embolic material derived from activation of the hemostatic system. The present study thus compared the hypotensive response precipitated by trauma or
sepsis
with that resulting from induction of intravascular coagulation. Mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) was monitored for 120 minutes after sublethal NCD trauma and after intra-aortic injection of live E coli (approximately 10(10) organisms per rat), E coli endotoxin (0.1 mg/100 gm), or bovine thrombin (10 units/100 gm) in 400-500 gm rats 30 minutes after RE blockade (50 mg/100 gm gelatinized lipid colloid) or saline injection. All rats were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital. No hypotension was observed in blockaded control rats. After trauma, MABP decreased by 20 minutes after injury and recovered to normal levels by 1 hour post-trauma. MABP decreased in blockaded rats after trauma and remained diminished through 2 hours. After live E coli endotoxin or thrombin, both the normal and the blockaded groups underwent an initial hypotension of similar magnitude. A second period of hypotension was much more pronounced in the RE-blockaded animals. Reduced MABP persisted in these animals through 2 hours. These data indicate that RE blockade enhances the hypotensive response to intravascular coagulation and that resulting from trauma or
sepsis
. This effect was especially apparent during the second phase of hypotension during
sepsis
and intravascular coagulation. It was suggested that the RES manifests some protective effect against the agents inducing this secondary hypotensive response.
...
PMID:Effect of reticuloendothelial blockade on the development of hypotension after trauma, sepsis, and intravascular coagulation. 26 5
One of the more intriguing aspects of the spleen is the protection against certain bacterial infections afforded by its unique vascular and immune function. There have been extensive clinical surveys which indicate an incidence of overwhelming postsplenectomy infection (OPSI) above that of the disease for which the splenectomy was done. In the absence of the spleen, either congenital or subsequent to surgical removal, this overwhelming
sepsis
has a 50% case fatality rate. The most common infective organism has been Diplococcus (tstreptococcus) pneumoniae (D. pneumoniae). Intensive investigations indicated loss of phagocytic function of the spleen,
depression
of serum IgM levels, a possible suppression of the lymphocyte responsiveness, and changes in opsonin-alternative complement system as potential causes of OPSI. Preventive measures against OPSI include trials of prophylactic Phenoxymethyl Penicillin (penicillin) and pneumococcal vaccine.
...
PMID:Overwhelming postsplenectomy infection. 32 70
Resistance to intravenous (IV) and intraperitoneal (IP) bacterial challenge during periods of reticuloendothelial (RE)
depression
following trauma as well as the influence of bacteremia on RE phagocytosis were studied. The experimental shock model utilized was the anesthetized (2 mg/100 g sodium pentobarbital) male rat subjected to nonlethal Noble-Collip drum trauma. During post-traumatic RE
depression
(60 min after injury) rats were challenged IV or IP with Escherichia coli (1.02 X 10(10)). The clearance half-time of the bacterial load injected intravenously in controls was 1.23 +/- 0.10 min. In contrast, the half-time was 3.62 +/- 0.69 min after sublethal trauma (p less than 0.005) and associated with prolonged blood bacterial retention. Pulmonary localization of E. coli administered either IV or IP was elevated in traumatized rats. Comparison of routes of bacterial challenge with respect to blood levels of viable bacteria suggested lower host bacterial resistance to the IP injection as opposed to the IV route of administration. Production of experimental bacteremia in normal rats resulted in a 39%
depression
(p less than 0.01) of RE test colloid clearance rate accompanied by a 49% increase (p less than 0.01) in pulmonary colloid localization. The data suggest that depressed systemic RE clearance capacity following trauma may decrease systemic resistance to
septicemia
, and that severe bacteremia may further undermine the functional state of the reticuloendothelial system.
...
PMID:Reticuloendothelial phagocytic response to bacterial challenge after traumatic shock. 33 34
Serial measurements of CH50, C3, C4, and factor B were performed on three newborn infants with group B streptococcal
sepsis
. Two of the septic infants had a colonized but noninfected identical twin. All three infants with group B streptococcal
sepsis
had hypotension, prolonged coagulation times, neutropenia, and respiratory failure. During the course of the
sepsis
, factor B was depressed 30% to 35%, C3 was depressed 40% to 60%, and CH50 was depressed by 100% when compared to their cord blood levels. Two of the infants also had a 50% to 70%
depression
of C4. In contrast, no significant decrease in complement levels occurred in the siblings of the twins or in two additional control infants. These data are characteristic of older patients with Gram-negative
sepsis
and strongly suggest that the group B Streptococcus has endotoxin-like properties.
...
PMID:Complement activation and group B streptococcal infection in the newborn: similarities to endotoxin shock. 34 Oct 69
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>