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

Hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) is defined as severe vasoconstriction of renal cortical vessels with critical impairment of glomerular filtration rate, initiated by deteriorating liver function. In addition, systemic vasodilation, predominantly of splanchnic vessels is present. Although the urinary status is basically normal, during the course of HRS kidneys are loosing their ability to concentrate and at an urinary production rate of less than 100 ml/day the urinary osmolarity and Na(+)-concentration drops significantly. Because HRS can not be improved by conventional medical treatment regimens, its prophylaxis is of major importance. Besides improvement of liver function and avoidance of drastic volume depletion (bleeding, paracentesis, high dose diuretic therapy) and sepsis, the therapeutic goal is to reverse systemic vasodilation and to achieve a concomitant relaxation of renal arteries. Expansion of plasma volume and application of renal vessel dilating prostaglandins is one strategy. Alternatively, therapy with ornipressin was shown to be successful, which improves renal perfusion and normalizes the hyperdynamic state of systemic circulation.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and therapy of hepatorenal syndrome]. 137 84

As a primarily intestinal pathogen. Yersinia enterocolitica (Y. e.) may cause generalized infection in patients with malignant and other serious diseases or immunodeficient subjects. In certain conditions, elevated serum and tissue iron concentrations represent an additional risk factor for systemic infection with this opportunistic bacterium. In our patient, Y. e. septicemia developed during liver cirrhosis decompensation. Clinical signs of infection were alleviated by appropriate antibiotic therapy (gentamycin, cefuroxime), but as septicemia had been present for several days prior to therapy, it aggravated the patient's general condition, which entailed the development of hepatorenal syndrome and eventually lethal outcome.
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PMID:[Sepsis caused by Yersinia enterocolitica in a female patient with liver cirrhosis]. 189 Sep 9

Since the introduction of the LeVeen modification of the peritoneovenous shunt (PVS) in 1974, these devices have been placed in a relatively large number of patients. The most common indication has been for medically intractable ascites in the setting of chronic liver disease. A review of a series of studies shows that we can expect approximately an 18% perioperative overall mortality rate, a 46% survival rate at 21 months, and loss of ascites in 59% of the survivors at 18 months. The PVS has not been shown by prospective trials to prolong survival significantly in patients with either intractable ascites or the hepatorenal syndrome (HRS), although it may shorten hospitalizations, compared with medical controls. A few well-documented cases of reversal of the HRS have been documented. The best results of PVS therapy have been evident in those patients with milder liver disease. The loss of ascites need not correlate with a functioning shunt. Alcohol abstinance is associated with hepatic functional recovery and may relate to the disappearance of renal sodium retention, resulting in shunt occlusion due to low flow. A number of serious complications with the PVS have been described. Nutritional repletion follows successful shunting, but might, in part, relate to simultaneous alcohol abstention. The more common complications of coagulopathy and fluid overload are preventable by total ascitic drainage at the time of surgery. Shunt patency remains a clinical problem. Only 18.6% of the total shunts placed functioned in the survivors at 2 yr. Perioperative infections with staphylococcal and Gram-negative organisms occur. Postoperative bacterial peritonitis or septicemia requires shunt removal for cure.
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PMID:The peritoneovenous shunt: expectations and reality. 219 58

Esophagogastrectomy for carcinoma of the esophagus or cardia has been performed in 32 patients with histologically proven hepatic cirrhosis. Thirty-one esophagogastrectomies were performed through a separate abdominal and right thoracic approach in 25 patients, a left thoracoabdominal approach in five patients, and without thoracotomy in two patients. One patient had a colon interposition. Seven patients died after operation (21%) as a result of anastomotic leakage in two patients, hepatorenal in four patients and portal thrombosis in one patient. The type of procedure did not influence mortality. The most common postoperative complication was the development of ascites (68%), and when associated with hepatorenal syndrome (in four patients) there was significant mortality (p less than 0.05). Sepsis was present in the terminal stages of all nonsurvivors. A prothrombin time less than or equal to 60% of normal values was the only significant preoperative predictive factor of mortality, with none of the three patients surviving below this level (p less than 0.05). It is concluded that the presence of cirrhosis is not a contraindication to esophagogastrectomy for carcinoma when curative resection can be undertaken. Hepatic reserve is the determinant factor of operative prognosis. Operative risk is acceptable if patients are classified as Child's class A, and prothrombin time is over 60% of normal values. Operation should be delayed when acute alcoholic hepatitis is present. Intraoperative discovery of cirrhosis is not a contraindication to resection when the above criteria are met.
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PMID:Esophagogastrectomy for carcinoma in cirrhotic patients. 221 Jun 5

We reviewed in retrospect the records of all patients at our institution in whom peritoneovenous shunts were placed to manage refractory ascites due to chronic liver disease from 1977 through 1986. There was a wide spectrum of underlying liver disease in these 23 patients; most frequent was alcoholic cirrhosis. Five were in modified Child's class A, 14 were in class B, and four were in class C. Fourteen of 23 patients had some complication associated with peritoneovenous shunt placement; clinical consumptive coagulopathy, infection, and gastrointestinal hemorrhage while hospitalized were most frequent. Fifteen of 23 died, 12 while hospitalized or within 1 month of hospitalization. Death in eight patients appeared to be related to shunt placement and was due to sepsis in five, hepatorenal syndrome with an obstructed shunt in one, consumptive coagulopathy in one, and pulmonary edema in one. All modified Child's class C patients, six of seven patients with clinical consumptive coagulopathy, and all patients with a preshunt total bilirubin greater than 3.7 mg/dl died while hospitalized or within 1 month of hospitalization. This review supports studies showing that placement of peritoneovenous shunts for refractory ascites has a high morbidity and mortality in patients with advanced liver disease, and does not support their use in the management of refractory ascites.
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PMID:Poor outcome from peritoneovenous shunts for refractory ascites. 271 11

Personal experience of 31 patients suffering from intractable ascites due to advanced liver cirrhosis between 1978 and 1987 is reported. Seventeen patients were selected for a peritoneojugular shunt: in 3 patients the Le Veen shunt was performed and in 14 the Denver shunt was preferred. The high postoperative morbidity and mortality due to liver failure, DIC, hepatorenal syndrome, bleeding, sepsis and cerebral thrombosis is pointed out. Careful selection of patients to be submitted to this surgical procedure is essential because of the high morbidity due to ascites reinfusion. DIC has to be diagnosed as soon as possible and, when severe, the prompt interruption of the peritoneojugular shunt is mandatory.
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PMID:[The Denver peritoneojugular shunt. Current indications]. 272 37

Urinary sediment TEM is capable of unequivocally demonstrating renal tubule cells and distinguishing them from urinary tract epithelial cells. The renal tubule cells and the accompaniments including myeloid bodies, inflammatory cells, or fibrin permit, in a particular clinical setting, synthesis of a meaningful renal diagnosis. Sequential TEM sediment studies can clarify ambiguities in diagnosis. Precisely, when much difficulty is experienced in distinguishing ATN from aminoglycoside nephrotoxicity in a patient with sepsis who has received aminoglycoside, urinary sediment TEM can facilitate the differential diagnosis with confidence. In another clinical setting, such as hypersensitivity acute interstitial nephritis, TEM urinary sediment has an irrevocable place by exhibiting the characteristic eosinophil granules that will confirm the above diagnosis, or deny it when they are absent. The morphologic features in the renal tubule cells in the sediment reflect similar changes in the tubular cells in renal tissue. Therefore, the severity of tubular changes are commensurate with the clinical outcome in terms of renal function recovery, need of dialysis, and mortality. The degree of correlation is significant. Thus, slight or no TEM sediment tubular changes signifies a good prospect for renal function recovery and low or no mortality. Conversely, severe tubular changes in the TEM sediment denote persistent renal failure accompanied by high mortality. Furthermore, the most severe tubular changes, found in hepatorenal syndrome, are consistent with its dismal prognosis.
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PMID:Analysis of urinary sediment by transmission electron microscopy. An innovative approach to diagnosis and prognosis in renal disease. 316 18

Four pediatric patients are presented in whom profound renal failure (hepatorenal syndrome) developed in association with severe end-stage liver disease. All four patients had successful orthotopic liver transplantation. Special emphasis is given to the preoperative and postoperative renal function in the patients, and the criteria used to establish the diagnosis of the hepatorenal syndrome are discussed. In the initial work on liver transplantation and reversal of the hepatorenal syndrome, two of the three patients recovered renal function but died in the perioperative period. The four patients presented in this report have not only had reversal of the hepatorenal syndrome after successful orthotopic liver transplantation but have also survived long term. The four patients have been followed up for periods ranging from 18 months to 4.5 years. Three of the four patients have maintained near normal renal function, whereas the fourth patient (who had a left nephrectomy for obstruction and sepsis) has had a significant decline in renal function.
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PMID:The reversal of the hepatorenal syndrome in four pediatric patients following successful orthotopic liver transplantation. 355 58

Esophagogastrectomy for carcinoma of the esophagus or cardia has been performed in 23 patients with histologically proven hepatic cirrhosis. All but two patients were classified as Child's class A and all but three had a prothrombin time over 60% of normal values. Twenty-two esophagogastrostomies were performed through a separate abdominal and right thoracic approach in 15 patients, a left thoracoabdominal approach in five patients, and without thoracotomy in two patients. One patient had a colon interposition. Six patients died after operation (26%) as a result of anastomotic leakage in two patients, hepatorenal in three patients and portal thrombosis in one patient. The type of procedure did not influence mortality. The most common postoperative complication was the development of ascites (65%), and when associated with hepatorenal syndrome there was a significant mortality (p less than 0.05). Sepsis was present in the terminal stages of all nonsurvivors. A prothrombin time less than or equal to 60% of normal values was the only significant preoperative predictive factor of mortality, with none of the three patients surviving below this level (p less than 0.05). It is concluded that the presence of cirrhosis is not a contraindication to esophagogastrectomy for carcinoma when curative resection can be undertaken. Hepatic reserve is the determinant factor of operative prognosis. Operative risk is acceptable if patients are classified as Child's class A and prothrombin time is over 60% of normal values. Operation should be delayed when acute alcoholic hepatitis is present. Intraoperative discovery of cirrhosis is not a contraindication to resection where the above criteria are met. This strict selection allows one to anticipate a lower mortality rate.
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PMID:Results of esophagogastrectomy for carcinoma in cirrhotic patients. A series of 23 consecutive patients. 360 34

Determining the cause of acutely deteriorating renal function is a common problem in clinical nephrology. The fractional excretion of filtered sodium (FENa) has been demonstrated to be a reliably discriminating test between prerenal azotemia and acute tubular necrosis. However, with increasing clinical use of the FENa, numerous reports of low FENa (less than 1%) have appeared. The clinical settings of these reports include oliguric and nonoliguric acute tubular necrosis, urinary tract obstruction, acute glomerulonephritis, hepatorenal syndrome, renal allograft rejection, sepsis, and drug-related alterations in renal hemodynamics. One particular urinary index cannot be expected to reliably discriminate between prerenal azotemia and acute renal failure in all cases. The utility of the FENa test in the differential diagnosis of acute renal failure must be interpreted in conjunction with the patient's clinical course and the use of additional urinary and serum tests.
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PMID:Fractional excretion of sodium. Exceptions to its diagnostic value. 397 Jun 21


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