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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We present a case of dramatic radiation enterocolitis inducing portal venous air diagnosed by Doppler sonography only. The sonographic pattern consisted of multiple irregular hyperechoic areas into the liver, with internal repetitive noisy bidirectional peaks superimposed on the usual continuous Doppler display of the portal flow. Although portal hyperechoic moving foci alone may reflect only slow portal velocity, they do not create any Doppler distortion as do moving bubbles. Portal air may have multiple causes such as abdominopelvic abscesses,
sepsis
, intestinal distension, fulminant hepatitis, cholangitis, cholecystitis,
diabetic acidosis
..., but mesenteric infarct, necrotic enterocolitis, and radiation enteritis are life-threatening conditions that have to be diagnosed as soon as possible. Although large quantities of portal air may be demonstrated on plain film of the abdomen or by computed tomography, Doppler sonography may detect smaller quantities, allowing earlier diagnosis of intestinal pathology requiring immediate surgical treatment. Therefore, Doppler sonography of the liver should be performed in any patient with acute abdominal pain or distension, especially if being treated by abdominal radiotherapy.
...
PMID:[diagnostic ultrasonography of air in the portal venous system: apropos of a case of colonic radionecrosis and literature review]. 782 61
In this paper the authors have evaluated the incidence and the clinical implications of sick euthyroid syndrome (SES) in a group of 144 patients in a department of internal medicine. SES is an alteration of thyroid hormone values in the absence of a thyroid disease, which is seen in patients suffering from serious diseases. Having classified SES into 3 subgroups according to the different alterations seen in the values of T3, T4, FT3, FT4, TSH, rT3 and TBG, they show the hypotheses that explain the biochemical mechanisms which are at the basis of these hormonal alterations. Fourteen of the 144 patients under observation were excluded as they were suffering from ascertained or subclinical thyroid disease. Thirty (23% of cases) of the remaining 130 patients had alterations of the thyroid hormones in accordance with SES diagnosis. Of these 30 patients, 19 had hormone values found in SES type I (63%), 2 in SES type II (6.5%) and 9 in SES type III (30.5%). In SES type I the diseases seen, in order of frequency, were: obstructive chronic bronchopneumopathy with acute respiratory failure,
diabetic ketoacidosis
, neoplasms, ischemic heart disease, cardiac failure, chronic renal failure, liver diseases, acute cerebral vasculopathies,
sepsis
and collagenopathies. The disease seen in the 2 cases of SES type II was obstructive chronic bronchopneumopathy with acute respiratory failure. In SES type III the diseases seen were, in order of frequency:
diabetic ketoacidosis
, lung diseases, ischemic heart disease, cardiac failure, peripheral arteriopathies, acute cerebral vasculopathies, neoplasms, liver diseases, acute renal failure. The incidence of SES in 23% of the admitted to hospital patients was found to be slightly higher than in other studies; this could be explained by a stricter selection of inpatients: in fact self-sufficient patients or those not needing urgent admission, were sent to an efficient out patient clinic where necessary examinations were quickly carried out, hospitalization being reserved for patients with more serious illnesses. We would like to underline how the incidence of SES is much greater than that of what is known as thyroid disease (23% compared to 5%), thereby confirming that it is the most frequent cause of alterations of thyroid hormones. With regard to the pathogenetical hypotheses, it is confirmed that in SES, the reduction of T3 values is accompanied by an increase in the values of rT3 as for reduced activity of 5-desiodinasis enzyme. In SES type III the increase of T4 values is due to the increase of TBG resulting in an increase in the link for T4 and therefore a reduced peripheral hormone activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[The euthyroid sick syndrome. Its incidence and clinical significance in an internal medicine department]. 802 42
Twenty-six patients presenting with 33 episodes of
Diabetic Ketoacidosis
(
DKA
) and managed on a protocol oriented system were analysed. Diabetes mellitus was newly diagnosed at presentation in 18% of the 33 episodes. The presenting symptoms were polyuria and polydipsia (58%), nausea and vomiting (52%), change in sensorium (24%), hyperventilation (24%), and abdominal pain (18%). The main clinical findings at admission were dehydration (97%), acidotic respiration (67%), coma and confusion (61%), a clinically detectable source of
sepsis
(49%), fever (33%) and hypotension (9%). Blood sugar levels at admission ranged between 351 mg/dl and 1200 mg/dl (mean = 633 mg/dl). The mean serum potassium at diagnosis was 5.1 mmol/l and the mean calculated serum osmolality was 320 mOsm/kg. The mean serum osmolality was higher in those with disturbed conscious level. Infections, particularly those of the urogenital tract, were the main precipitating cause for the
DKA
. Only 12 of the 19 patients with
sepsis
had fever. Eight of the episodes were attributed to patients' non-compliance with insulin. Four patients died during the 33 hospitalisations, giving a mortality rate of 10%. Death occurred despite glucose control and stabilisation of the ketoacidotic state and was due to uncontrolled septicaemia. The mean duration of hospitalisation was 11 days. The ketoacidosis state was reversed after a mean duration of 9.5 hours, with an average soluble insulin requirement per patient of 52.4 units.
...
PMID:Diabetic ketoacidosis--a study of 33 episodes. 815 79
In a 3-month period (January to March, 1992), patients with rectal temperature below 35 degrees C detected by an electrical rectal thermometer (Diatek, Inc, San Diego, CA) were enrolled. In addition to treatment of the underlying diseases, the patients were rewarmed with either a heating lamp (core temperature > 32 degrees C) or warm fluid intravenous infusion and/or gastric lavage (core temperature < 32 degrees C). Patients' vital signs, serum potassium, pH, initial temperature, mean weather temperature, underlying disease and outcome were recorded and compared between survivors and non-survivors. We collected 23 cases with mean age of 71.6 years and mean core temperature, 33.32 degrees C (29.4-34.9 degrees C). The diagnosis included hypoglycemia in 7 cases,
sepsis
in 3 cases, active TB in 2 cases, HHNK in 1 case,
DKA
in 1 case, UGI bleeding in 1 case, parkinsonism in 1 case, intracerebral hemorrhage in 1 case, urinary tract infection in 1 case, brain tumor post operation in 1 case, arrhythmia in 1 case, senile dementia in 1 case, COPD in 1 case and lung CA in 1 case. 12 (52%) cases died during admission. No significant difference in clinical parameters was noted between survivors and non-survivors. In conclusion, although in subtropic area, the hypothermic patients in our country cannot be overlooked. As patients are usually elder and have other diseases, the prognosis is correlated with the severity of the underlying disease. Alert, intensive care, prevention and treatment of the complications that arouse, and careful rewarming are necessary for management of such patients.
...
PMID:[Hypothermia in the patients of emergency department]. 828 89
The cases presented illustrate the clinical application of several of the common pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic changes in the elderly. The number of drugs that must be used with caution in the aging person is potentially quite large. In addition, there are numerous other diseases that can result in additional changes in drug absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion, and target-organ effect. These conditions are particularly prevalent in the elderly patient in the critical care setting, and include the systemic inflammatory response syndrome,
sepsis
, acute renal failure,
diabetic ketoacidosis
, and the postoperative state. It must be emphasized, however, that the elderly are not a homogeneous group. The rate of decline of many physiologic functions varies widely. Chronic diseases and lifestyle alterations are additional variables that affect the function of many body systems. Furthermore, it is likely that the different pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic parameters discussed in this article do not all change to the same degree in a given individual. Pharmacologic therapy, therefore, always will be quite empiric in elderly patients. There is no substitute for meticulous monitoring of the patient using every available modality. This is particularly crucial in the critical care setting, where drugs can be lifesaving and life threatening at the same time.
...
PMID:Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic monitoring of the elderly in critical care. 869 38
Teaching in critical obstetric problems should have special interest during residency and thereafter. Obstetric emergencies are relatively rare but may occur at any time. The obstetrician at that moment enters a special area requiring a multidisciplinary approach. From experiences in recent years and study of the literature the following recommendations can be summarized; (1) the need to understand (patho)physiologic changes in pregnancy, (2) cultivation of an anticipative attitude towards conditions with elevated risks, (3) adequate knowledge of diagnostic procedures, (4) the discipline to make a differential diagnosis, (5) experience with monitoring of (fetal and) maternal condition, (6) availability of management protocols for emergencies such as shock, eclampsia, uterine rupture, amniotic fluid embolism, thrombo-embolism,
sepsis
and
diabetic ketoacidosis
, (7) awareness of pitfalls with inspection of lesions and assessment of blood loss, (8) awareness that caesarean section without prior stabilization can be a life threatening procedure, (9) practice in life-saving measures such as uterine compression, packing, ligation of vessels, postpartum hysterectomy, (10) teaching of postoperative care, (11) insight into the cascade of events finally leading to multi-organ failure. Obstetric emergencies require a disciplined approach, in which teamwork is the cornerstone.
...
PMID:Training in the management of critical problems: teacher's view. 870 48
We undertook the present study to examine the acid-base and electrolyte disturbances in relation to hydration status in patients with
diabetic ketoacidosis
(
DKA
). A total of 40 insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus patients (22 male, 18 female), aged 18-61 years with
DKA
admitted to our hospital during the last 2 years, were studied. The duration of diabetes averaged 9 +/- 2 years. In all cases a detailed investigation of the acid-base status and electrolyte parameters was performed. Twenty-one patients had a pure metabolic acidosis with an increased serum anion gap, seven had
DKA
combined with hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, nine had
DKA
coexisting with metabolic alkalosis, while three had
DKA
with a concurrent respiratory alkalosis. Hydration status as evidenced by the ratio of urea/creatinine seems to play an important role in the development of mixed acid-base disorders (detected by changes in the ratios delta anion gap/delta bicarbonate (delta AG/delta HCO3) and sodium/chloride (Na/Cl)). In fact, hyperchloremic acidosis developed in the patients with the better hydration status. However, contradictorily, the severely dehydrated patients who experienced recurrent episodes of vomiting developed
DKA
with a concurrent metabolic alkalosis. Finally, patients with pneumonia or gram-negative
septicemia
exhibited
DKA
combined with a primary respiratory alkalosis. We conclude that patients with
DKA
commonly develop mixed acid-base disorders, which are partly dependent on patients' hydration status.
...
PMID:Acid-base and electrolyte disturbances in patients with diabetic ketoacidosis. 896 87
Hand infections are common presentations among diabetic patients admitted to hospital in Tanzania. The morbidity and mortality are high and patients' hospital inpatient stay tend to be prolonged because of suboptimal therapy. We describe four diabetic patients with hand infections and fatal outcomes. In contrast to patients with foot infections, none of our patients had clinical evidence of peripheral neuropathy or vascular disease. All four patients eventually died in hospital after acquiring hand
sepsis
and
diabetic ketoacidosis
which did not respond to prolonged courses of intravenous insulin and antimicrobials. Literature review suggests such infections are at least as likely to include Gram-negative organisms as Staphylococcus aureus. Primary management should have included aggressive surgery with limb amputation if necessary with adjunctive antimicrobial therapy.
...
PMID:Fatal hand sepsis in Tanzanian diabetic patients. 1147 73
Diabetic ketoacidosis
results from insulin deficiency and insulin resistance and is marked by hyperglycaemia, ketoacidosis, dehydration and electrolyte losses. Management includes correction of shock, dehydration, electrolyte deficits, hyperglycaemia, acidosis and
sepsis
(if present). Warning signs include severe dehydration, shock, pH < 7.0, hypokalaemia, hypernatraemia, hyperosmolality, hyperlipidaemia, deterioration in consciousness and
diabetic ketoacidosis
in very young patients. The principles of treatment include (i) admission to a unit with paediatric experience, (ii) treatment of shock, (iii) rehydration over 24-36 h, or longer if the osmolality is >360 mmoll(-1), (iv) normal saline for rehydration unless the patient is hypernatraemic, (v) avoidance of bicarbonate unless acidosis is interfering with myocardial contractility, (vi) insulin infusion to achieve a fall in blood glucose levels of 5 mmol h(-1), (vi) potassium, (vii) use of 5% glucose when the blood glucose level falls <12mmoll(-1), (ix) treatment of any complications and (x) change to subcutaneous insulin when
diabetic ketoacidosis
is controlled.
...
PMID:Practical management of diabetic ketoacidosis in childhood and adolescence. 982 96
Diabetic ketoacidosis
is an extremely serious complication of diabetes mellitus. It arises because of a complex disturbance in glucose metabolism. There is usually a precipitating cause such as
sepsis
or myocardial infarction. If not recognised and appropriately treated, it can have devastating consequences. This is a case report of a patient with severe
diabetic ketoacidosis
and interesting electrocardiographic findings. The initial electrocardiographic (ECG) findings were suggestive of an acute myocardial infarction. The ECG changes normalised remarkably following initial management of the
diabetic ketoacidosis
. There have been only occasional reports of hyperkalemia causing electrocardiographic changes, closely resembling those of acute myocardial infarction.
...
PMID:Pseudo myocardial infarct--electrocardiographic pattern in a patient with diabetic ketoacidosis. 1006 88
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