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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The present study was designed to determine the gastric hemodynamics in a septic model that causes both a hyperdynamic state and acute erosive
gastritis
.
Sepsis
was established in twelve pigs by the intramuscular shank injection of Pastuerella multocida (42 X 10(8) colonies) in triptose phosphate broth; four pigs received sterile broth injections (shams) and eight received sterile saline injections (controls). After 18 hours, cardiac output was measured by both the cardiogreen dilution technic and the radioactive microsphere dilution technic; cardiac output was then compared to total and regional gastric blood flow measured by the raioactive microsphere entrapment technic. Acute erosive gastritis developed in septic pigs in the fundus and body of the stomach; the antrum was spared. Cardiac output was significantly increased in septic pigs compared with sham and control pigs. Total gastric blood flow and regional blood flow to the fundus, body, and antrum were also increased in direct proportion to the increase in cardiac output. These data suggest that acute erosive
gastritis
is primarily due to an end-organ cellular insult from
sepsis
and is not primarily due to a decrease or redistribution in gastric blood flow.
...
PMID:Gastritis and gastric blood flow in hyperdynamic septic pigs. 124 58
Phlegmonous inflammation of the digestive tract is a rare lesion related in the majority of the previously described cases to systemic infections and chronic hepatic diseases. Both process may promote gastric and intestinal loss of the mucosal local defenses mechanisms against bacterial invasion. The term phlegmonous enterocolitis or
gastritis
defines an acute inflammatory process with purulent or nonpurulent character, that selectively damages the gastric, small and large intestines submucosal layer. The intestinal lesions are more frequently located in the small portion, followed by the colonic involvement. In the present paper we describe the postmortem findings and clinical course of a case with phlegmonous colitis in a 53 years old woman with cirrhosis and S pneumoniae
septicemia
.
...
PMID:[Phlegmonous colitis]. 130 6
This study compared prophylactic administration of either intragastric misoprostol (200 micrograms four times a day), a prostaglandin E1 analog, or bolus intravenous cimetidine (300 mg every 6 hours) in preventing stress lesions and stress bleeding in 127 adult postoperative patients who required mechanical ventilation and also had developed hypotension or
sepsis
. Both drug treatments were equally effective in preventing the development of diffuse
gastritis
(greater than 10 gastric hemorrhagic lesions) and in preventing upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage (UGIH). The combined data from both groups showed that for the 44 (35%) patients who died, death was significantly associated with the presence at study entry of renal failure (64% of 25 patients with renal failure died), hepatic failure (57% of 23 patients) or coagulopathy (62% of 29 patients) (p less than 0.02 for each), and with the number of organ system failures at study entry (48% of 69 patients with multiple organ system failures died, p less than 0.001). Death was also significantly associated with the presence of adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) at study entry or the development of ARDS (63% of 24 patients with ARDS died, p less than 0.001), and the development of UGIH (5% of 93 patients with known bleeding outcome died, p less than 0.05). The number of stress lesions that developed was significantly associated with subsequent UGIH (p less than 0.001). Additional organ system failure developed during the study in 31% of the 127 patients, as did diffuse
gastritis
in 20% of 111 patients who had a follow-up endoscopy. These results demonstrate that postoperative patients who require mechanical ventilation and have hypotension or
sepsis
are at significant risk for the development of stress gastric lesions and multiple organ system failure even when prophylaxis for stress ulcers is provided. Furthermore, the presence of ARDS, renal failure, hepatic failure, coagulopathy, and UGIH are significantly associated with death.
...
PMID:Stress ulcers and organ failure in intubated patients in surgical intensive care units. 155 13
Stress
gastritis
frequently occurs in association with shock or
sepsis
. Gastric mucosal ischemia appears to be a key feature in these critically ill patients. The University of Wisconsin cold preservation solution (UWS) is an isoosmolar, nonglucose-based perfusate that minimizes hypothermia-induced cell swelling and prevents intracellular acidosis and oxygen-free radical injury, while providing high energy substrates for donor organs. In a prospective, single-blind study, 18 similar Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly divided to receive only 5 per cent dextrose and water (D5W) (Group 1) or a 50 per cent solution of D5W+UWS (Group 2) for 72 hours. At the end of 72 hours the animals were stressed by the cold-restraint model. The mean number of ulcers for Group 2 was nearly half that of Group 1. Also, Group 2 had a significantly lower mean total ulcer length (P less than 0.005) and ulcer index (P less than 0.05). Most of Group 2 had mild
gastritis
changes (grade 0 to 1), while more than half of Group 1 had severe
gastritis
(grade 3). Gastric mucosal pH was similar for both groups. Topically applied UWS appears to reduce the severity and incidence of stress
gastritis
in this experimental model. Because mucosal pH values were similar, it is thought that UWS may alter the effects of gastric mucosal ischemia at a cellular level.
...
PMID:Prevention of stress gastritis with tissue preservation solution. 158 84
Between 1972 and 1989, the incidence of viridans streptococcal bacteremia at the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston increased from one case per 10,000 admissions to 47 cases per 10,000 admissions (P less than .0001). A shock syndrome characterized by hypotension, rash, palmar desquamation, adult respiratory distress syndrome, and occasionally death developed in 26% of cases of streptococcal
septicemia
but in only 4% of cases of
septicemia
involving other gram-positive bacteria (P = .0005). The risk of streptococcal infection increased with the prophylactic administration of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole or a fluoroquinolone (P less than .0001) and with profound neutropenia (P less than .0001). Treatment of chemotherapy-induced
gastritis
with antacids or with histamine type 2 (H2) antagonists was associated with a sevenfold increase in risk (P less than .001), while sucralfate therapy did not increase risk (P = .65). Streptococcal infection may result from gastric overgrowth of organisms resistant to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole in an antacid- or H2 antagonist-induced alkaline environment, with the gastrointestinal tract ulceration caused by antineoplastic therapy providing a convenient portal of entry. In patients receiving chemotherapy, replacement of antacids or H2 antagonists by an acid-sparing regimen should be considered to preserve the natural acidic barrier to infection.
...
PMID:Septicemia and shock syndrome due to viridans streptococci: a case-control study of predisposing factors. 162 76
Six patients with end-stage emphysema (age 44 +/- 2 years) underwent double lung transplantation (Tx) from June 1988 through May 1990. All suffered from severe inanition and required oxygen therapy. The ischemic time was 193 +/- 28 minutes. Post-Tx immune suppression was OKT3 (14 days), cyclosporine (trough levels of 150 +/- 25 ng/ml), azathioprine to keep WBC at 3,000 to 5,000/cu mm (1 to 3.0 mg/kg/day) and following OKT3, a tapering prednisone regimen. Two rejection episodes that occurred in two patients on post-Tx day 5 and 10 were treated with bolus doses of methylprednisolone. The mean hospital stay was 32 +/- 7 days (range, 20 to 69 days). Four patients required treatment of cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection:
gastritis
(+donor, +recipient) in one and CMV pneumonia in two (+donor, -recipient). A fourth (+donor, -recipient) had right-sided Candida empyema six weeks post-Tx, developed CMV and staphylococcal
sepsis
, and died 64 days post-Tx. One patient required pyloroplasty eight weeks post-Tx and one patient underwent tracheal suture line repair at eight weeks. During a follow-up of 81 patients months (range, 8 to 24 months), one patient had developed Epstein-Barr viral (EBV) induced lymphoproliferative disease in the lung and one patient had developed EBV lymphoma. Three patients are at work, one is continuing rehabilitation, and one is at home. Double lung Tx offers a definitive benefit to patients with emphysema; however, a prolonged postoperative course can be expected. Viral infections remain serious but treatable problems.
...
PMID:Treatment of end-stage chronic obstructive pulmonary disease with double lung transplantation. 184 23
True stress ulcers are primarily superficial gastric fundic lesions that occur in the clinical setting of severe shock, trauma, burns, and
sepsis
, especially peritonitis. They are to be clearly differentiated from Cushing's ulcers, exacerbation of pre-existent chronic ulcers, and drug-induced
gastritis
, all of which have completely different pathogenetic mechanisms. The etiology of true stress ulcers is most importantly related to ischemia and tissue acidosis, although luminal acid and pepsin are requisite for ulceration to occur. The sole clinical manifestation of stress ulcers is hemorrhage. Prophylaxis with antacids alone, or with a combination of antacids and H2 receptor antagonists is highly efficacious if luminal pH is carefully monitored. The treatment of exsanguinating hemorrhage, once established, carries with it an extremely high morbidity and mortality.
...
PMID:The clinical problem of stress ulcers. 288 24
The clinical course of a child who developed an adenocarcinoma of the stomach at 11 years of age is described. At 6 years of age, the child was evaluated for abdominal pain, weight loss, and vomiting. She was found to have hemorrhagic, atrophic gastritis, achlorhydria, and panhypogammaglobulinemia. The
gastritis
improved with corticosteroid therapy, but relapsed each time that the steroid dosage was tapered. The clinical course was marked by severe growth failure, recurrent infections, and intermittent abdominal pain. Radiographic studies done when the patient was 11 years of age demonstrated a large fungating mass on the lesser curvature of the stomach. Endoscopy and biopsies done 1 year previously had not revealed any sign of malignancy. A radical gastrectomy was performed. Microscopic studies revealed multifocal adenocarcinoma of the stomach with no evidence of invasion of the submucosa or local lymph nodes. The patient died of Candida
septicemia
and pneumonia 6 months after the gastrectomy. There was no evidence of recurrence of the tumor on autopsy. The relationship between common variable immunodeficiency and gastrointestinal disease is described.
...
PMID:Multifocal adenocarcinoma of the stomach in a child with common variable immunodeficiency. 338 60
The gastromucosal barrier (GMB) can be disrupted by a number of aggressive factors or by a decrease in mucosal defense factors. If there is back diffusion of hydrogen ions into the mucosa, mucosal damage ranging from an erythematous gastro-duodenitis to erosive and ulcerative
gastritis
or life-threatening hemorrhage may ensue. The pathogenesis of stress-related mucosal damage seen in critically ill patients suffering from burns,
sepsis
, head trauma, respiratory insufficiency, or multisystem disease is also related to a decrease in mucosal resistance. Early studies of cimetidine in animals and in humans demonstrated its ability to increase gastric transmucosal potential difference, indicating an enhancement of the integrity of the GMB. Several studies show that cimetidine protects the stomach from aspirin-induced mucosal damage; increases gastric mucus production and mucus glycoprotein content, which contributes to the protective action of mucus; increases mucosal secretion of bicarbonate; increases gastric mucosal blood flow, which prevents mucosal hypoxia seen in patients in shock or otherwise critically ill patients; increases endogenous mucosal prostaglandin synthesis; and increases the rate of epithelial cell renewal, a factor important to mucosal healing. Since cimetidine suppresses acid secretion and enhances mucosal defense, it is an important therapeutic tool in the management of acid-related disorders, particularly stress-related mucosal damage.
...
PMID:Gastric acid secretion and mucosal defense mechanisms with special reference to the role of cimetidine in critically ill patients. 353 48
A retrospective study of 1068 patients who had operations for peptic ulcer disease in the 12-year period from January 1, 1974, to January 1, 1986, permits these conclusions: The number of patients admitted to the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) has declined steadily in the years of this study--1974-1986. The average number of patients admitted with a diagnosis of peptic ulcer disease in precimetidine years--1974, 1975, and 1976--and in recent years--1982, 1983, and 1984--shows a decline of 39.3% in admissions. In the same periods, the average number of operations per year has declined from 92 in precimetidine years to an average of 71 (16.5%) recently. The decline has been greatest in patients operated on electively for duodenal ulcer. Operations for massive hemorrhage and acute perforations and the number of deaths have remained nearly constant. The overall mortality rate was 10.3%. The mortality following elective operations for pain was 0.5%; for urgent operations, including those for obstruction, 4.5%, and for bleeding other than massive, 7.5%; and for emergency operations, including those for acute perforation, 20.9%, and for massive hemorrhage, 22.1%. The main causes of death were organ failure (most commonly of the lungs) and
sepsis
. Early complications were documented 345 times and were followed by reoperation in 84 cases, or 7.4% of the total. Delayed stomal function was noted in 63 cases and required reoperation in 14. It was most common after Roux anastomoses and required operative intervention most commonly after gastric resection, Billroth I (GRBI). Delay was three times as common when vagotomy (V) was added to GR. Early postoperative hemorrhage was a serious complication when it occurred after operations for acute perforations or massive hemorrhage. The incidence was 3.7% after suture of a perforation; after operations for acute massive hemorrhage, it was 4.3% after pyloroplasty and vagotomy, with or without arterial ligation [PV(L)], and 0.3% after GR, with or without arterial ligation [GR(L)]. Late complications led to reoperation in 66 cases (6.2%). The most important were recurrent ulceration and alkaline
gastritis
. Recurrence rates after a minimum follow-up of 5 years (based on survivors of initial procedures and a second operation, both in the MGH) were 20.5% after suture of a perforation, 6.2% after PV, 2.3% after GRBII, and 0.4% after GRVBII. These figures are lower than expected; incomplete follow-up and improved medical care are factors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:A thousand operations for ulcer disease. 376 81
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