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

Twenty Holstein-Friesian male calves were obtained within 4 hours after bith (colostrum deprived) and allotted to 1 of 4 groups, each given a different feeding: colostrum, milk replacer, polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), and saline solution (0.85% NaCl). Each calf was fed 2 L of the respective diets every 12 hours. Rectal temperatures were recorded and blood samples were collected immediately before each feeding. At approximately 27 hours of age, all calves were inoculated orally with 1.5 X 10(10) viable organisms of a septicemia-producing Escherichia coli serotype O26: K60:NM. Within 8 hours, all calves had diarrhea. Coli-septicemia (E coli cultured from liver, spleen, and cardiac blood) was present in 1 of the 5 calves fed colostrum, in 5 or the 5 calves fed milk replacer, in 5 of the 5 calves fed PVP, and in 4 of the 5 calves fed saline solution. At necropsy of the calves (12 to 48 hours after oral inoculation), the same organism was isolated by cultural technique from small intestines of 19 of the 20 calves. Serum immunoglobulin G concentrations increased (P less than 0.01) in calves fed the colostrum diet in sharp contrast to the agammaglobulinemia occurring in calves fed the milk replacer, PVP, or saline solution. Results indicate that colostrum fed to the calf soon after birth provides protection from colisepticemia, but does not prevent the diarrhea of colibacillosis.
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PMID:Resistance of neonatal calves given colostrum diet to oral challenge with a septicemia-producing Escherichia coli. 33 27

Three cases of hematogenous infection of total knee replacement are reported. In two cases septicemia following cholecystectomy resulted in E. coli infection of the knee joint. Prophylactic antibiotic therapy of implant patients undergoing dental or surgical procedures is recommended.
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PMID:Hematogenous infection of total knee implants. 34 85

A 58 year old Chinese male, one week after arriving in Canada from Hong Kong, presented with acute abdominal pain and diarrhoea which was rapidly followed by Escherichia coli infection causing septicaemia and meningitis. His past history revealed bronchial asthma for 15 years treated with steroids. At laparotomy, 7 days after the onset of symptoms, he was found to have extensive haemorrhagic infarction of the small bowel and right colon. Examination of the fibrosed mesenteric vessels revealed numerous filariform larvae of Strongyloides stercoralis, within the walls, and in all layers of bowel wall. The role of the parasite in the production of obliterative arteritis in this fatal case of haemorrhagic enteropathy is discussed. Clinical strongyloidiasis, in uncomplicated cases, varies from mild to severe with gastroenteritis, nausea, colicky abdominal pain, electrolyte imbalance and symptoms of malabsorption syndrome (MARCIAL-ROJAS, 1971). In malnourished individuals and patients with debilitating infections, either newly acquired or asymptomatic latent infection with S. stercoralis can assume severe dimensions (BROWN and PERNA, 1958; HUGHTON and HORN, 1959). Similarly, in patients on steroid (CRUZ et al., 1966; WILLIS and MWOKOLO, 1966; NEEFE et al., 1973) and immunosuppressive therapy for lymphomatous diseases or deficient in immune response (ROGERS and NELSON, 1966; RIVERA et al., 1970), systemic strongyloidiasis is often fatal. The increased frequency of auto-infection in such patients with a breached immune barrier is, however, unclear. Further complications of this infection due to severe enterocolitis result in sepsis, bacteraemia and meningitis (BROWN and PERNA, 1958; HUGHTON and HORN, 1959). This paper presents a fatal case of S. stercoralis infection which illustrates an uncommon if not unique, mechanism in its production of haemorrhagic enteropathy leading to sepsis and death.
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PMID:Fatal bowel infarction and sepsis: an unusual complication of systemic strongyloidiasis. 122 84

Genetic diversity among 22 Escherichia coli strains isolated from chickens with swollen-head syndrome (SHS), an acute respiratory disease of domestic poultry, and 93 strains isolated from birds with colibacillosis was assessed on the basis of allelic variation at 20 enzyme-encoding loci detected by multilocus enzyme electrophoresis. SHS isolates from Spain and Canada were polymorphic at 14 loci and were classified into 19 multilocus genotypes, defining clones that differed on average at 34% of the loci. In most cases, SHS isolates of different clonal genotypes were distinct in O:H serotype and expressed different fimbrial antigens. Comparisons with 93 isolates obtained from birds with colibacillosis revealed enzyme polymorphisms at 17 of 20 loci, with an average of 3.5 alleles per locus. In the total sample, 56 clonal genotypes were distinguished, with 27 (23%) of the isolates belonging to one of three common clones. Both SHS and colibacillosis isolates were genetically diverse, with an average single-locus diversity of 0.36, indicating that a wide variety of naturally occurring bacterial clones is associated with these acute avian infections. Six previously defined groups of clones identified in diseased birds from the United States were represented in isolates from Spain, indicating that similar clones occur in widely separated geographic areas. In addition, one group of SHS isolates was closely related to a recognized widespread clone complex incriminated in human septicemia and meningitis. The results suggest that certain strains implicated in SHS infections belong to a clone complex whose members have special attributes that promote involvement in invasive diseases in humans and animals.
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PMID:Genetic relationships among strains of avian Escherichia coli associated with swollen-head syndrome. 222 31

Escherichia coli hemolysin has been implicated as a pathogenicity factor in extraintestinal E. coli infections including sepsis. In the present study the effects of intravascular administration of hemolysin were investigated in isolated blood-free perfused rabbit lungs. Low concentrations of the toxin in the perfusate (0.05-5 hemolytic units/ml, corresponding to approximately 5-500 ng/ml), caused a dose- and time-dependent release of potassium, thromboxane A2, and prostaglandin I2, but not of lactate dehydrogenase, into the recirculating medium, as well as a dose-dependent liberation of the prostanoids into the bronchoalveolar space. These events were paralleled by a dose-dependent pulmonary hypertension, and studies with different inhibitors collectively indicated that the vasoconstrictor response was mediated predominantly by pulmonary thromboxane generation. In addition, E. coli hemolysin elicited a protracted, dose-dependent increase in the lung capillary filtration coefficient, which was independent of the prostanoid-mediated pressor response and resulted in severe pulmonary edema formation. We conclude that E. coli hemolysin can elicit thromboxane-mediated pulmonary hypertension combined with severe vascular leakage in isolated lungs in the absence of circulating inflammatory cells and humoral mediator systems, mimicking the key events in the development of acute respiratory failure in states of septicemia.
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PMID:Thromboxane-mediated hypertension and vascular leakage evoked by low doses of Escherichia coli hemolysin in rabbit lungs. 250 Apr 55

In two retrospective studies we have found outbreaks of E. coli pyelonephritis and septicemia to be due to nosocomial spread and fecal colonization with virulent E. coli strains in the neonatal ward of Danderyd Hospital. The incidence of extraintestinal E. coli infections before the age of one year was therefore prospectively studied in all children born at Danderyd Hospital during two and a half years (n = 7963). The number of infections was correlated to the previous fecal colonization with P-fimbriated E. coli. During this study we found no outbreaks of E. coli infections. The incidence of E. coli pyelonephritis before the age of one year was 0.6-0.7%, which we propose to be a baseline incidence. This corresponds well with the low incidence of fecal colonization with P-fimbriated E. coli found among these children. Fecal colonization with P-fimbriated E. coli during this non-epidemic period had no predictive value for the individual child for the later development of pyelonephritis.
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PMID:Epidemiological aspects of P-fimbriated Escherichia coli. IV. Extraintestinal E. coli infections before the age of one year and their relation to fecal colonization with P-fimbriated E. coli. 288 99

The clinical manifestations in 595 children hospitalized with gastroenteritis during a 15-month time frame were studied. They were divided into eight groups according to etiologic agent: rotavirus (203 patients); Salmonellae (98); Escherichia coli (55); Campylobacter (36); Shigella (22); combined rotavirus and salmonellae (44); combined rotavirus and other bacteria (26); and no pathogen (111). The mean duration of diarrhea was shortest in the rotavirus and "no pathogen" groups (4.8 and 5.6 days, respectively) and longest with pure and mixed salmonella infections (12.3 and 12.9 days, respectively). Associated manifestations were most frequent with salmonellae and least frequent with rotavirus and E. coli infections. Malnutrition also was most common with salmonellae and lowest with rotavirus and E. coli. There were no differences in the frequency of hypernatremia. Hyponatremia was most frequently encountered with salmonella (25% compared to 9% in the rest of the patients). Evidence of septicemia was found in 22 patients, 21 of whom were in the salmonella groups. The four deaths in this series (0.7%) also were in the salmonellae groups. The clinical severity of salmonella infection in developing countries, particularly in young and malnourished children, warrants attention to more intensive management. The selective use of antibiotics may help reduce the mortality and morbidity of gastroenteritis.
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PMID:Acute gastroenteritis: clinical features according to etiologic agents. 340 53

In the course of our molecular studies of virulence factors associated with invasive avian Escherichia coli infections, it was first necessary to distinguish between common E. coli and those that cause septicemia in poultry. We found a direct correlation between the ability of clinical isolates of E. coli to bind Congo red dye (CR) and their ability to cause septicemic infection in chickens. This finding was supported by bacteriological studies of 30 broiler flocks (26 sick and 4 healthy) and by virulence studies in chickens and mice. All 144 isolates of E. coli from internal tissues of diseased birds were determined to be CR-positive (red colonies). Congo-red-positive E. coli colonies were isolated from air sacs, pericardium, liver, lung, joint fluid, and heart blood of chickens with lesions of colisepticemia. In contrast, of 170 E. coli isolates from the poultry house environment and from the trachea and cloaca of healthy birds, more than half were CR-negative (white colonies). No CR-negative (white) E. coli colonies were found in internal organs from birds with typical lesions of colisepticemia. We feel that these preliminary findings suggest that the CR dye binding could be used as a phenotypic marker to distinguish between invasive and noninvasive isolates.
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PMID:Congo red medium to distinguish between invasive and non-invasive Escherichia coli pathogenic for poultry. 352 40

Forty-eight of 134 chickens collected from a flock on a broiler farm were diagnosed pathologically and microbiologically to have colibacillosis. Both acute septicemia (seven birds, 1 to 36 days old) and subacute serositis (41 birds, 5 to 57 days old) were found. The former consisted of necrosis with fibrinous exudates in the ellipsoids and lymphoid follicles of the spleen, and fibrinous thrombi in sinusoids of the liver with occasional necrosis of hepatic cells. The latter had fibrinopurulent inflammation with granulomatous changes in the serosal tissues--including the epicardium, pericardium, and hepatic peritoneal sac--accompanied by septicemic lesions in the spleen and liver. Respiratory lesions (airsacculitis, pneumonia, and tracheitis) were noted in most chickens affected with acute septicemia and subacute serositis. Degenerative changes also were observed in the bursa of Fabricius.
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PMID:Pathology of spontaneous colibacillosis in a broiler flock. 390 13

Since the age of nine weeks a red haired girl suffered from purulent dermatitis and recurrent, systemic E. coli infections. She had an excessive hyperimmunoglobulinemia E, as well as impaired granulocyte adherence and chemotaxis. Though a sepsis was evident, the granulocytes exhibited a random FITC-Concanavalin A fluorescence. In spite of intensive treatment with various antibiotics and several granulocyte transfusions the child died at the age of 2 years and 11 months. As shown by the FITC-Concanavalin A distribution, the hyperimmunoglobulinemia E may have caused a decreased membrane fluidity causing the impaired adherence and chemotaxis. This could explain the pathophysiology of the Job's Syndrome.
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PMID:[Membranes properties of granulocytes in Job's-Syndrome with E. coli-septicemia (author's transl)]. 611 94


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