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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ten severely burned (greater than 50% BSA) pediatric and young adult patients developed 19 episodes of clinical
sepsis
of four or more days duration. During eight of the 19 septic episodes the patients received granulocyte transfusions (median, four; range, two to seven). Risk variables, types and prevalence of infections, mainly Pseudomonas aeruginosa and antibiotic regimens were similar for all the septic episodes studied. All eight episodes (100%) resolved in the transfused group while eight of 11 (72%) episodes resolved in the nontransfused group. Patients survived four episodes of
ecthyma
gangrenosum when granulocyte transfusions were used and the single episode in which they were not used was fatal. Granulocyte transfusions may be helpful in severely burned patients with
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Granulocyte transfusions for patients with severe thermal burns. 41 32
A case of right-sided Pseudomonas cepacia endocarditis in a heroin addict is presented in which septic cutaneous vasculitis (
ecthyma
gangrenosum) is a prominent feature. Ecthyma gangrenosum, most commonly associated with
sepsis
due to P aeruginosa, has not been previously described with P cepacia
septicemia
.
...
PMID:Pseudomonas cepacia endocarditis and ecthyma gangrenosum. 83 96
Thirty-two cases of Xanthomonas maltophilia bacteremia have been identified over the last two years at the Veterans General Hospital, Taipei. Among them, 27 cases (84%) were due to hospital-acquired infections, and 14 cases (44%) were polymicrobial bacteremia. One case was confirmed as prosthetic valve endocarditis and one case was complicated by recurrent attacks of
ecthyma
gangrenosum. Most cases had severe debilitating conditions. Twelve cases (38%) had a malignancy, 19 cases (59%) were resident in the Intensive Care Unit and 16 cases (50%) had undergone major surgery. The main predisposing factors included central venous catheterization, endotracheal intubation or tracheostomy, prior antibiotic therapy and prolonged hospitalization. Moxalactam, chloramphenicol and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole were the most effective agents in vitro against X. maltophilia. Twenty-two cases (69%) died during hospitalization; 13 cases (41%) were directly attributed to
septicemia
. Factors that adversely influenced mortality included inappropriate antimicrobial therapy and prior antibiotic treatment. Of particular interest is the fact that none of the patients who did not receive appropriate antimicrobial therapy survived. Early diagnosis and appropriate antibiotic therapy are critical for improving the prognosis of X. maltophilia infection.
...
PMID:Xanthomonas maltophilia bacteremia: an analysis of 32 cases. 136 39
Ecthyma gangrenosum due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a skin infection in which necrotic ulcerations surrounded by a red areola develop. The diaper area is the region most often involved in infants. Typically,
ecthyma
gangrenosum occurs in patients with
septicemia
and risk factors (chemotherapy, neutropenia). However, transient bacteremia or an infection confined to the skin may be the cause in some patients, with maceration in the diaper area and previous antibiotic therapy as risk factors.
...
PMID:[Gangrenous ecthyma of the diaper area in infants]. 141 66
Nineteen immunocompromised patients with extensive skin lesions caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa with or without P. aeruginosa bacteremia were analysed. Patients whose lesions originated in the skin were in the majority (14 patients). Skin lesions were located at the site of entry of bacteria (apocrine areas in 12 patients). Cutaneous lesions were pleomorphic but the typical picture of
ecthyma
gangrenosum was common in this group of patients. Only 2 of them developed P. aeruginosa
septicemia
and the prognosis was relatively good (7.5% mortality rate). These observations confirm that
ecthyma
gangrenosum may be a primary cutaneous disorder not systematically associated with bacteremia.
...
PMID:A study of nineteen immunocompromised patients with extensive skin lesions caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa with and without bacteremia. 168 70
In parenteral drug abuse, cutaneous manifestations are very common. A variety of skin lesions are indicators of a possible drug addiction: obliteration of peripheral veins and hyperpigmentation of the overlying skin, punched-out scars due to subcutaneous injection, persistent edema following thrombophlebitis, and excoriations due to heroin pruritus. Infectious and non-infectious complications may be accompanied by typical skin alterations, such as
ecthyma
in
sepsis
caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa, multiple ulcers due to embolic infarct, or hypersensitivity reactions mediated by an immunological process. A variety of serious complications may develop at the injection sites: abscesses, gangrene, necrosis, or necrotizing fasciitis. These examples show that the dermatologist is in many ways involved in the care for addicted patients. In addition, these patients frequently suffer from sexually transmitted diseases or blood-borne infections; HIV-infection is rapidly spreading in this group. We now face new problems of differential diagnosis, especially since constitutional symptoms of HIV-infection may mimic symptoms of drug abuse and vice versa. Moreover, immunological alterations similar to those in HIV patients may even occur in drug addicts who are not infected with the virus.
...
PMID:[Skin changes in drug-dependent patients]. 219 89
In short, bacterial
sepsis
is associated with a number of peripheral manifestations involving the skin and soft tissues. The pathogenesis of the lesions observed is not fully understood and is almost certainly multifactorial. In
ecthyma
gangrenosum, the presence of large numbers of gram-negative bacilli in the walls of small blood vessels without a substantial inflammatory response suggests that either the bacteria themselves or bacterial products are responsible for tissue damage. Endotoxin probably plays a prominent role in producing these lesions. That Pseudomonas and Aeromonas species seem to cause
ecthyma
out of proportion to their prevalence as a cause of bacteremia might suggest that the endotoxin of these organisms has a special predilection for skin and subcutaneous structures. More likely, it indicates that other bacterial substances, such as exotoxins or proteases, are involved. The absence of PMN leukocytes is thought to play a permissive role, allowing unopposed bacterial proliferation. Lesions of symmetric peripheral gangrene characteristically do not have bacteria present. The presence of intravascular fibrin accumulation probably resembles the generalized Shwartzman phenomenon. However, the gangrenous lesions themselves more likely result from systemic hypotension and the resulting hypoperfusion of the tissues than from vessel obstruction. In lesions associated with vigorous inflammatory response, bacterial products may damage tissue either directly or by attracting leukocytes that, in turn, release substances that cause further tissue damage. An etiologic role for endotoxin or the gram-positive bacterial cell wall is likely, since endotoxin is known to produce similar lesions in the localized Shwartzman reaction. Favoring a role for other bacterial substances is the predisposition of V. vulnificus to cause cellulitis or of C. fetus to cause inflammation of the major vessels during
sepsis
; the mechanisms for these reactions are entirely unknown. It is interesting that in most instances in which peripheral lesions are caused by
sepsis
, either a large number of bacteria or an intense inflammatory response by PMNs is present, but not both. In both kinds of lesion, the tendency to involve blood vessels by different pathogenetic mechanisms contributes to the evolution of the disease process. In intensely inflamed lesions, veins and arteries can be shown histologically to be occluded. In the absence of inflammation, bacterial invasion of vessel walls or simply the presence of bacterial products adjacent to the vessel may produce spasm. As noted, the pathogenetic significance of thrombosis observed in the lesions of DIC remains unclear.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cutaneous manifestations of bacterial sepsis. 252 95
Although the first Aeromonas strain was described by Zimmermann as early as in 1890, it took 60 years until Caselitz established human pathogenicity of strains then called "Vibrio jamaicensis". Since then, and especially in the last 10 years, there have been increasing numbers of reports on different infections caused by members of the genus Aeromonas. These include
sepsis
; meningitis; cellulitis; necrotizing fasciitis;
ecthyma
gangrenosum; pneumonia; peritonitis; conjunctivitis; corneal ulcer; endophthalmitis; osteomyelitis; suppurative arthritis; myositis; subphrenic abscess; liver abscess; cholecystitis and/or ascending cholangitis; urinary tract infection; endocarditis; ear, nose, and throat infections; balanitis; etc. The role of Aeromonas in gastrointestinal disease is very controversial. Increasing epidemiological data suggest that these organisms play a major role in enteric infections, but so far enteropathogenicity has not been demonstrable in experiments where volunteers were given high numbers of Aeromonas possessing different virulence factors. Virulence factors include hemolysin(s), enterotoxin(s), hemagglutinins, invasivity, and others; but these are not found more frequently in strains isolated from patients with diarrhea than from healthy controls. Whether there is a correlation between species and disease remains to be elucidated and requires more information about the taxonomy of this genus.
...
PMID:Aeromonas as a human pathogen. 264 16
We examined a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus and
sepsis
due to Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Early in the infection, she developed skin lesions that consisted of indurated tender nodules and hemorrhagic and nonhemorrhagic bullae. Blister fluid contained gram-negative rods, which were identified as P. aeruginosa on culture. Bullae and nodules, as well as
ecthyma
gangrenosum, can be early cutaneous signs of pseudomonal
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Pseudomonas septicemia with nodules and bullae. 329 25
Skin lesions, an important clue to the cause of
septicemia
, result from five main processes: (1) disseminated intravascular coagulation and coagulopathy; (2) direct vascular invasion and occlusion by bacteria or fungi; (3) immune vasculitis and immune complex formation; (4) emboli from endocarditis; and (5) vascular effects of toxins. Disseminated intravascular coagulation probably plays only a minor role in pathogenesis. Vascular invasion by bacteria may result in a severe inflammatory reaction, as in meningococcemia, or in a minimal reaction, as in
ecthyma
gangrenosum. Gram-stained smears of scrapings from the base of skin lesions--a frequently neglected procedure--is an important diagnostic adjunct. Skin biopsies are particularly important in the diagnosis of Rocky Mountain spotted fever and infections caused by Candida.
...
PMID:Skin clues in the diagnosis of life-threatening infections. 351 82
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