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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
PVE is increasingly frequent and often lethal. The classic features of infective
endocarditis
may be absent early in the course of the illess. Therefore, patients with prosthetic heart valves and fever must be considered candidates for this infection until another cause for the fever can be established. Five to six blood cultures will document the persistent bacteremia of PVE in most cases. Treatment consists of parenteral penicillins for sensitive organisms plus valvular re-replacement for intractable heart failure mechanical malfunction of the valve, persistent
sepsis
, or multiple major emboli. In spite of aggressive therapy, the mortality remains high. Therefore, appropriate prophylaxis is warranted in patients with prosthetic valves who must undergo procedures that might lead to bacteremia.
...
PMID:Prosthetic valve endocarditis. 62 May 13
Seventy episodes of Staphylococcus aureus
sepsis
occurring over a nine-year period in pediatric cancer patients are reviewed. Prominent findings at the time of diagnosis included fever, granulocytopenia, and active malignancy. Probable or suspected sites of primary infection were present in 40 episodes (57%). Serious direct complications of staphylococcal
sepsis
included only three cases of pneumonia and one of myositis. However, second infections by other organisms developed in 16 episodes (24%), resulting in nine nonstaphylococcal infectious deaths during therapy.
Endocarditis
and osteomyelitis never occurred in this group of patients. The median duration of antistaphylococcal therapy was 15 days.
...
PMID:Staphylococcus aureus sepsis in children with cancer. 63 75
A 65 year old man developed
endocarditis
and
septicemia
due to Hemophilus aphrophilus, a Gram-negative coccobacillus. Renal rather than cardiac failure was the principal feature of his illness and renal biopsy was compatible with glomerulonephritis secondary to
septicemia
. Rapid recovery of renal function and improvement of the glomerular lesion followed antibiotic treatment of the
septicemia
. This case illustrates the renal damage that can occur in association with
septicemia
due to rarer infectious agents. As with more common organisms, specific antimicrobial therapy leads to rapid improvement of the nephropathy.
...
PMID:Glomerulonephritis associated with Hemophilus aphrophilus endocarditis. 63 69
Serious infections due to lactobacilli have been rarely cited. We report our findings in nine recent patients with lactobacillemia. In the combined literature and current experience,
endocarditis
and
sepsis
from localized suppuration were the most common clinical syndromes, most frequently arising from prior oropharyngeal infections. Lactobacillus
endocarditis
showed a predilection for left-sided cardiac involvement (100 per cent) and systemic arterial embolization (55 per cent). The nine clinical isolates were tested for minimal inhibitory and bactericidal concentrations (MICs and MBCs) against five drugs with broad gram-positive spectrums; of note, these organisms demonstrated a high incidence of both unachievable MBCs (64 per cent) and widely disparate (greater than 100 fold) MIC:MBC ratios (38 per cent). This is in accord with observations in Lactobacillus
endocarditis
of poor in vivo clinical response despite "appropriate" regimens and achievable MICs of the organisms. Bactericidal synergistic studies on two
endocarditis
isolates indicated that the penicillins plus aminoglycosides may be potentially useful in the treatment of deep-seated Lactobacillus infections when single antimicrobials fail to achieve a cure.
...
PMID:Lactobacillemia--report of nine cases. Important clinical and therapeutic considerations. 64 45
A 2-year-old Charolais bull was examined because of lameness that developed after infection of a tail laceration. A systolic murmur was auscultated during the routine physical examination. A diagnosis of
endocarditis
and polyarthritis secondary to
septicemia
from the tail lesion was made. The diagnosis was supported by echocardiography and blood cultures, which yielded Corynebacterium pyogenes. The clinical diagnosis was confirmed at necropsy.
...
PMID:Echocardiographic diagnosis of endocarditis in a bull. 65 13
Between 1965 and 1976 40 patients underwent valve replacement for active, infective
endocarditis
. The overall mortality rate was 32,5 per cent. Six patients died early (within 30 days) and 7 within the following 8 years. 11 patients developed paravalvular leckage. Eight of these 11 patients required reoperation. We suggest that all patients with active infective
endocarditis
who develop progressive heart failure, intractable
sepsis
or recurrent embolization should be subject to immediate valve replacement despite higher operative risk.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of active infective endocarditis (author's transl)]. 69 94
A review of postmortem materials from two teaching hospitals, accumulated in a 14-year period (1962--1975), disclosed 63 patients with myocardial abscesses among 12,359 autopsies, an incidence of 0.5%. All 63 patients had multi-focal myocardial abscesses; the lesions were grossly discernible in six patients. Coexisting infective
endocarditis
was present in approximately 20% (12) of the 63 patients with myocardial abscesses. Candida and Staphylococcus aureus were most common organisms responsible for the abscesses. Candida was identified in 23 patients (37%) by histologic examination of the heart sections, and 11 of these also had antemortem blood cultures positive for Candida. Staphylococcus aureus was cultured from the antemortem blood of 22 patients, two of whom also showed candidal organisms in the heart at necropsy. Eighty-one per cent (51) of 63 patients had abscesses in one or more extracardiac organs. It appeared that most of the myocardial abscesses had resulted from disseminated
sepsis
. Surgical conditions, malignancy and alcoholic hepatic disease were the most frequent primary conditions in patients with myocardial abscesses.
...
PMID:Myocardial abscesses. 69 68
In a prospective clinical and bacteriological study of 192 consecutive patients with
septicemia
admitted during the period 1967--1971 to a hospital for infectious diseases, 31 cases of proved (group I) and 10 with probably (group II) bacterial endocarditis were observed and analysed with regard to a variety of factors. The incidence of bacterial endocarditis was 3 per 1 000 admissions. The mean age of the patients was 52.6 years; there was no sex predominance. In about one third of the patients apparently normal valves were involved. Underlying non-cardiac factors were present in two thirds, even in younger age groups, in which chronic alcoholism and intravenous drug abuse were frequent. Secondary manifestations from various organs were noted in about three quarters of the patients, in one quarter already on admission. alpha-Hemolytic streptococci and staphylococci were most commonly isolated, followed by gram-negative enteric rods, beta-hemolytic streptococci, enterococci, and pneumococci. A probable portal of entry could be assumed in 80% of the patients and could often be related to the type of bacteria involved. In some cases, diagnostic or therapeutic procedures preceded the disease. A subacute course of the
endocarditis
was observed in one third of the patients and all these had alpha-hemolytic streptococci or enterococci. The aortic and mitral valves were equally often involved and equally often infected by alpha-hemolytic streptococci. In 4 patients, 3 of whom were drug addicts, the tricuspid valve was probably involved; all were infected by staphylococci. In one case autopsy revealed a mural
endocarditis
.
...
PMID:Bacterial endocarditis. I. A prospective study of etiology, underlying factors and foci of infection. 71 83
Staphylococcus aureus is a frequent cause of
endocarditis
as well as bacteremia arising from noncardiac sites. Differentiation of endocardial from nonendocardial S. aureus bacteremia is often difficult, especially in febrile patients with S. aureus
sepsis
and no indentifiable focus. A number of clinical and laboratory features help distinguish these two bacteremias.
...
PMID:Staphylococcal bacteremia: distinguishing endocarditis. 76 Apr 24
During the past decade 44 patients with active
endocarditis
, defined as valvular infection requiring operative intervention before completion of a planned course of antibiotic therapy, have been treated at Stanford University Medical Center. Twenty-seven patients had infection of a native valve (primary
endocarditis
) and 17 had infection of a previously implanted intracardiac prosthesis. In 91 per cent of cases urgent valve replacement was dictated by rapid hemodynamic deterioration and in the remainder by recurrent macroemboli or persistent
sepsis
. Various species of Streptococcus were the most common organisms encountered, followed by Staphylococcus aureus. Unusual bacteria were mostly limited to patients with prosthetic infections; Candida was seen in both groups. Aortic valve replacement was required in 80 per cent of patients. Operative mortality rates were 30 per cent in the group with primary disease and 24 per cent in the group with disease of the prosthetic valve. Most deaths were attributable to multiple system complications generated preoperatively and were unrelated to duration of preoperative antibiotic administration. Five-year survival rates for operative survivors were 68 per cent (primary) and 54 per cent (prosthetic). This experience illustrates the potential therapeutic benefit of operative intervention during active infective
endocarditis
complicated by severe heart failure or other life-threatening events.
...
PMID:Operative treatment of active endocarditis. 77 23
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