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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors studied the skin disorders in 50 patients who have undergone renal transplantation. They observed: -- Viral infections (
herpes simplex
, herpes Zoster, warts) in 56% of the patients. -- Bacterial infections in 36%, resulting in
septicemia
in 8% of the cases. -- Fungal infections in 26% of the patients. These infections appeared more severe than usual and recurred frequently. The occurence of several infections processes in the same patient was not uncommon. The clinical aspect and high incidence of various infections is related to immunosuppresive therapy. However, there is no clear-cut correlation between the type of infection and the type of treatment used. -- Squamous cell carcinoma occured in one patient. A high incidence of malignancies is known to occur in immunosuppressed patients. -- Skin signs related to hemodialysis (pruritus, hypermelanosis, skin dryness, vascular disturbances) regressed. -- The incidence of adverse reactions to drugs was high. -- 4 cases of ulcerations of the oral mucosa probably related to Azathioprine were observed.
...
PMID:[Skin manifestations in renal transplants]. 21 59
Cancer patients show an immune deficit whose beginnings are influenced to one extent or another, by two factors: the cancer itself, and the antimitotic-immunosuppressive treatment to which the patient is subjected. The immune deficit will have repercussions in the anti-infectious defense that these patients show: --Greater number of infections. --Greater severity of infections. --Tendency towards generalization and showing of septicemic states. The problem is most serious in hematological tumors (leukemia, lymphosarcoma) where the primary cause of death is infection. During the period of activity of the disease, and also in relation to the antimitotic treatment, the PMN will decrease in absolute count and will function poorly. The consequence will be a high frequency of bacterial infections,
sepsis
, pneumonia, skin infections, etc., predominantly caused by gram-negative germs and staphylococcus (any germ considered not to be "very virulent" can be found); and it will result in a high mortality rate. When these children are in remission or have solid tumors, the problem is not so acute, and bears more relation to antimitotic treatment and other extraneous factors (hospitalization, catheters, antibiotics, gastrointestinal ulcers...). Patients most frequently show localized bacterial, viral and protozoon infections (varicella, zooster,
herpes simplex
, cytomegalia, pneumocystis) because of the predominance of cellular immunity deficit.
...
PMID:Immunosuppression. Role on the infectious diseases of oncologic children. 57 77
The Authors report a case of two pre-term monocorial twins affected by HSV-1 infection (
Herpes Simplex
Virus type 1), with generalized
sepsis
and involvement of the central nervous system (CNS), born by mother with primary infection who presented a typical vesicular eruption a week before delivery. As the HSV-1 was a disseminated type and the CNS was involved in both the twins, the diagnosis was based on clinical and laboratory findings (specific IgM and IgG) and on the use of Delpech-Lichtblau antibody liquoral index, a significant results both in the first and the second twin. Intensive care and early specific treatment with Acyclovir allowed a slow but progressive improvement of the twins' clinical picture. The antibody liquoral index may therapy of the viral
sepsis
cases involving the CNS, more than the cultural or antigen isolation of the treated virus.
...
PMID:[Herpes simplex virus infection in pregnancy: epidemiologic, diagnostic and therapeutic data. An unusual case of HSV-1 in monozygotic twins]. 128 30
Two fatal cases of haemophagocytic syndrome diagnosed on the basis of autopsy findings at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Barbados, are presented. They were both young patients, a male 20 years of age and a female 28 years of age, with common clinical features of severe constitutional symptoms, pharyngeal haemorrhages, pancytopenia, and fever. The female patient had elevated titres to
herpes simplex
virus indicative of recent infection as well as postmortem evidence of overwhelming mixed bacteria
sepsis
. In both cases, histopathological studies showed lymphoid depletion and histiocytes displaying haemophagocytosis.
...
PMID:Haemophagocytic syndrome. 178
Acute oral problems that frequently occur during oncologic therapy include mucositis, infection, and hemorrhage. Certain chemotherapeutic agents consistently produce significant mucositis.
Herpes simplex virus infection
is a frequent cause of oral ulceration. Gram-negative oral bacilli can cause severe local necrosis of oral tissues and lethal bacteremia and
sepsis
.
Sepsis
with oral streptococci is common in the early postengraftment period following bone marrow transplant. A case report describes the successful use of a new hemostatic agent to control hemorrhage in a patient with severe thrombocytopenia in leukemic relapse. Long-term dental complications of oncologic therapy include abnormal dental and craniofacial development. Dental abnormalities in children treated for acute lymphoblastic leukemia are more severe if oncologic therapy begins before 5 years of age and if cranial irradiation is used. The combination of high-dose cranial irradiation (2400 cGy) and chemotherapy before 5 years of age results in deficient mandibular growth. In children with reduced growth hormone production and deficient mandibular growth due to treatment with bone marrow transplantation, stimulation of mandibular condylar growth is reported following the use of growth hormone.
...
PMID:Dental management of the pediatric oncology patient. 183 63
Recent advances in prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of infection-associated preterm labor are discussed. This includes antepartum treatment of vaginal infections, amniocentesis for culture and glucose levels, and adjunctive antibiotic treatment of preterm labor and preterm premature rupture of the membranes. Risk factors for neonatal group B streptococcus
sepsis
are described and testing for rapid detection of maternal group B streptococcus colonization is discussed, as are recent prospective studies of pregnancy outcome following human parvovirus B19 infection. Studies quantifying the transmission of
herpes simplex
virus to neonates following vaginal delivery to mothers with recurrent infections are discussed, as well as the results of several studies using rapid detection kits for the virus.
...
PMID:Obstetric and neonatal infection. 195 5
We report a female neonate who developed severe
septicemia
presenting with pneumonia and hepatitis due to an infection with
herpes simplex
virus type II. In spite of antiviral as well as intensive care therapy, three weeks after admission, extensive hepatic calcification was demonstrable on abdominal radiograph, a sign of severe cellular necrosis. In contrast the pulmonary infiltration recovered completely. The clinical follow up was completed by ultrasound and radiography. The infant died at the age of two months secondary to severe postnecrotic hepatic failure. At autopsy, histological evaluation confirmed the former diagnostic and technical findings; in addition, pulmonary calcifications were detected morphologically which had not been seen on the chest radiograph. The significance of progressive organ calcifications for the prognosis of recovery has been discussed.
...
PMID:Progressive calcifications of lung and liver in neonatal herpes simplex virus infection. 1110 May 2
The majority of patients with Aids suffer from diarrhea and weight loss, as well as opportunistic infection and tumors of the gastrointestinal tract; endoscopy is frequently necessary. Often, but not always, it is possible to identify an opportunistic tumor or infection which explains the patient's signs and symptoms. In other cases, HIV may itself be pathogenic. The most important opportunistic pathogens are Candida albicans (stomatitis and esophagitis), cytomegalovirus and
herpes simplex
virus (esophagus, stomach, biliary system, colon), cryptosporidium (small intestine, biliary system), Isospora belli (small intestine), salmonella, shigella, and campylobacter (small and large intestine,
septicemia
), and Mycobacterium avium intracellulare (liver, spleen, intestinal submucosa, and bacteremia). Involvement of the gastrointestinal tract is frequent in Kaposi's sarcoma, though it is often asymptomatic. In contrast, gastrointestinal lymphomas are aggressive and rapidly progressive tumors.
...
PMID:[AIDS and gastrointestinal tract: a summary for gastroenterologists and surgeons]. 215 57
Oral complications of cancer therapy often have systemic consequences. Pain and discomfort are common and can lower intake of fluid and nutrients, which in severe cases can lead to dehydration and malnutrition, requiring hospitalization. Oral infections are frequent accompaniments of cancer treatment.
Herpes simplex
virus is the most common symptomatic oral viral infection, and, in latently infected patients the virus is frequently reactivated after cytoreductive therapy. Viral (infectious) oral mucositis is often indistinguishable from noninfectious mucositis. Bacterial infections are less commonly observed today, perhaps because of the routine use of empiric broad-spectrum antibiotics; however, many episodes of
septicemia
in neutropenic patients apparently originate from oral microorganisms. Fungal infections are frequent and are usually due to Candida species. Spread to the esophagus or systemic dissemination can occur. Noninfectious oral mucositis can be used as a marker of toxic effects in other organs, especially hepatic veno-occlusive disease. In bone marrow transplant patients with mucositis, hepatic veno-occlusive disease is six times more frequent than in such patients without mucositis.
...
PMID:Oral complications of cancer therapies. Infectious and noninfectious systemic consequences. 218 56
During the past two decades, an explosive growth in both the prevalence and types of sexually transmitted diseases has occurred. Up to 55 percent of homosexual men with anorectal complaints have gonorrhea; 80 percent of the patients with syphilis are homosexuals. Chlamydia is found in 15 percent of asymptomatic homosexual men, and up to one third of homosexuals have active anorectal
herpes simplex
virus. In addition, a host of parasites, bacterial, viral, and protozoan are all rampant in the homosexual population. Furthermore, the global epidemic of AIDS has produced a plethora of colorectal manifestations. Acute cytomegalovirus ileocolitis is the most common indication for emergency abdominal surgery in the homosexual AIDS population. Along with cryptosporidia and isospora, the patient may present to the colorectal surgeon with bloody diarrhea and weight loss before the diagnosis of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease. Other patients may present with colorectal Kaposi's sarcoma or anorectal lymphoma, and consequently will be found to have seropositivity for HIV. However, in addition to these protean manifestations, one third of patients with AIDS consult the colorectal surgeon with either condylomata acuminata, anorectal
sepsis
, or proctitis before the diagnosis of HIV disease. Although aggressive anorectal surgery is associated with reasonable surgical results in some asymptomatic HIV positive patients, the same procedures in AIDS (symptomatic HIV positive) patients will often be met with disastrous results. It is incumbent upon the surgeon, therefore, to recognize the manifestations of HIV disease and diagnose these conditions accordingly.
...
PMID:Sexually transmitted diseases of the colon, rectum, and anus. The challenge of the nineties. 224
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