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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
During the last 8 years (1971-1979) all newly diagnosed previously untreated patients with
Hodgkin's disease
in Denmark have been centralized to uniform staging procedures and treatment. A total of 802 patients were registered, or 2 patients/100 000. Lymphangiography was performed in 708 patients (88%), and 437 patients (55%) underwent laparotomy with splenectomy. Treatment included radiotherapy, combination chemotherapy (MOPP or similar programmes), and combined modality treatment. The overall 8-year actuarial survival for all stages combined was 66%, and relapse-free survival was 55%. 144 patients died of
Hodgkin's disease
, 23 from complications to therapy and examination procedures, and 54 died of unrelated causes. Survival was significantly better for patients without B-symptoms, and decreased gradually with advancing age. There was a strong correlation between unfavourable prognosis and advancing stage and/or histology, but mediastinal involvement had no influence upon the prognosis. Staging laparotomy was associated with 4 deaths due to infection, and splenectomy with 10 cases of severe pneumococcal infections, 4 of which were fatal. Fatal complications due to subsequent treatment included 2 cases of cardiac arrest following mantle-field irradiation and 3 cases of haemorrhage or
sepsis
following chemotherapy. 5 cases of acute myeloid leukaemia were observed.
...
PMID:Hodgkin's disease in Denmark. A national clinical study by the Danish Hodgkin Study Group, LYGRA. 693 97
Two patients hyperinfected with Strongyloides stercoralis (an intestinal nematode) are described. Both were both in Puerto Rico and had left the island six to 15 years previously; both were receiving adrenal steroids (one for
Hodgkin's disease
and the other for Goodpasture's syndrome). One died shortly after diagnosis, but the other survived the hyperinfection syndrome and complicating bacterial
sepsis
and meningitis. In addition to our case reports, 103 previously described cases of presumed strongyloides hyperinfection are reviewed. Among 89 patients immunocompromised by therapy or disease, the mortality rate was 86%; bacterial
sepsis
often contributed to the fatal outcome. In most cases, infection was acquired in an endemic area, sometimes long before the hyperinfection syndrome occurred. The few patients who had never been to an endemic area had a history of prolonged contact with highly soiled material, an observation suggesting cross infection from a contaminated person. When administered in time, thiabendazole, the drug of choice for strongyloidiasis, was effective in 70% of cases. If intestinal infection with S. stercoralis is detected and treated before immunosuppressive therapy is initiated and if a high index of suspicion for the hyperinfection syndrome is maintained while immunosuppressive therapy is given, the mortality from this disease should decrease.
...
PMID:Syndrome of hyperinfection with Strongyloides stercoralis. 702 45
161 children followed up postoperatively following splenectomy, 29% had spherocytosis, 14%
Hodgkin's disease
, 12% traumatic rupture of the spleen, 11% portal hypertension and 7% idiopathic thrombocytopenia. Postoperatively a slight wound infection occurred in 5% of the children, while complications were seen in 2% which could be interpreted as directly caused by the operation; in 23 patients, however, (i.e. 15%), severely infections occurred such as pneumonia, meningitis and
sepsis
. The lethality rate of the infected children was 31.8%. Postoperatively we determined the leucocyte count, thrombocytes and erythrocyte count, the immunoglobulins IgG, IgA, IgM and IgE, the serum concentrations of the complement components C3, C4 and the serum proteins alpha 1-antitrypsin and transferrin. The data obtained were compared with the corresponding data reported in the literature.
...
PMID:[Complications of splenectomy in childhood (author's transl)]. 704 92
We previously reported a patients who developed fulminant pneumococcal
sepsis
12 years after successful treatment for
Hodgkin's disease
, which included splenic irradiation. We have since evaluated splenic size and function in 25 patients who had received splenic irradiation 5 to 16 years previously either for
Hodgkin's disease
(n = 19) or non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (n = 6). Mean maximum splenic diameter as measured on a 99mTc-sulfur colloid liver-spleen scan was 6.2 cm in the irradiated group and 9.7 cm in a control group (p less than 0.001). The mean percentage of erythrocytes containing pits when observed with interference phase microscopy was 13.0% in the irradiated group, which was significantly different (p less than 0.001) from the levels found in each of the control groups: normal subjects, 0.9%; unstaged and untreated lymphoma patients, 0.6%; and patients after splenectomy, 33.7%. Patients who have had splenic irradiation should be considered at risk of developing overwhelming pneumococcal
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Functional hyposplenia after splenic irradiation for Hodgkin's disease. 705 1
Experience with 72 children in which the type of staging laparotomy recommended by the Intergroup
Hodgkin's Disease
in Childhood Study (IHDCS) was employed (1967-1981) is reviewed. Laparotomy altered the stage in 35% of these patients including advance in stage (I-II to III-IV) in 24 patients, and reduction in stage (III to II) in one patient. In adults, Stage III disease is divided into III1 and III2 on the basis of the presence or absence of lower abdominal node involvement; and prognosis is significantly better in III1. Nine patients from two additional institutions were included in a special study of Stage III disease. This included 22 children in III1 and 11 children in III2. Although the children with Stage B (systemic symptoms) disease were concentrated in III2, none of the measured difference between these two groups were significant. No fatal postsplenectomy
sepsis
has been noted since the use of pneumococcal vaccine and prophylactic penicillin became standard.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the surgical aspects of staging laparotomy for Hodgkin's disease in children. 716 71
Sixty-nine patients with biopsy-proven
Hodgkin's disease
were subjected to laparotomy, splenectomy, liver biopsy, bone biopsy, and para-aortic nodal biopsies between October 1970 and December 1975, and have now been followed for 5 years. There were no major short-term surgical complications. There was one death from
septicemia
in a splenectomized adolescent. Laparotomy with splenectomy provides more precise delineation of intraabdominal disease than other methods. In difficult or equivocal cases, staging laparotomy can help choose the best treatment regimen.
...
PMID:Staging laparotomy for Hodgkin's disease in 69 patients. 721 67
Twenty-eight children with
Hodgkin's disease
were followed between 1971 to 1978. Patients were grouped at diagnosis by clinical staging (C.S.) I and II (60%) and III and IV (40%). All patients were laparotomized and splenectomized and multiple node gland biopsy were taken in order to classify them in anatomopathological stages (A.P.S.) and to administer treatment according to a local protocol. No surgical complications were seen and in 10 patients (36%), infiltration of spleen, lymph nodes and other organs were found at surgery which changed their initial clinical stage to a more advanced stage. Then patients (36%) presented 12 episodes of viral infections, during the first years after splenectomy, and 9 bacterial infectious complications mainly between 2 to 4 years after surgery. All patients with A.P.S. I and II are alive and in complete remission, without treatment and with a mean survival time (M.S.T.) of 32 months. M.S.T. in patients with A.P.S. III A has been 63 months and two out of six have died from tumor dissemination and
septicemia
. M.S.T. in patients A.P.S. III B and IV has been 57 months and 3 out of 11 have died all from dissemination of their disease. Dissemination of the disease, splenectomy and immunologic depression from therapy are important factors to be evaluated when laparotomy is performed in children with
Hodgkin's disease
.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic laparotomy in the child under 12 with Hodgkin's disease]. 729 73
Fifty-four children and adolescents with
Hodgkin's disease
Stages I--IV were treated with chemotherapy plus radiotherapy from 1967 to 1972. Thirty-eight patients (70%) remain in continuous complete remission. Nine patients have died, four of progressive disease, three of pneumonitis, one with probable pneumococcal
sepsis
, and one of acute myelocytic leukemia. Significant retardation of height and crown-rump length occurred, particularly in boys who received at least mantle or abdominal radiotherapy when younger than age 16 years. Five women have amenorrhea and no patient has clinical evidence of hypothyroidism. The major long-term effects of therapy in this group of patients has been growth retardation. Future studies to minimize long-term effects of therapy are necessary but must be carefully designed so that present cure rates are not jeopardized.
...
PMID:Long-term results of treatment of children and adolescents with Hodgkin's disease. 742 56
Partial splenectomy with resection of the lower third of the spleen was performed in three children as part of a standard staging laparotomy for
Hodgkin's disease
. The technique proved to be simple and safe with no post-operative complications. The ability to preserve splenic tissue and to prevent post-splenectomy
sepsis
in children is weighed against the probably low risk of missing solitary splenic lesions with partial splenectomy. This procedure should play a major role in the surgery of various splenic disorders in children, including
Hodgkin's disease
.
...
PMID:Partial splenectomy in staging laparotomy for Hodgkin's disease. 742 3
Four cases of extraintestinal salmonellosis caused by Salmonella enteritidis were described. Underlying diseases in the three patients were haematological neoplasms (2 splenectomized and 1 with massive leukemic infiltrations of the spleen) and in the fourth haemophilia B: only that patient had a prior symptomatic intestinal infection. Blood cultures for S.ent. were positive in all patients and additionally in that suffering from
Hodgkin's disease
urine, lymph node and stool cultures also showed S.ent. In the haemophiliac patient culture of suppurated hematoma was positive. All patients recovered from S.
sepsis
but three then died of their neoplastic diseases. The haemophiliac patient is in a good condition. Various disturbances in the immunological tests were observed.
...
PMID:[Extraintestinal salmonellosis in patients with blood diseases caused by Salmonella enteritidis]. 747 35
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