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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
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Untreated patients with endogenous Candida endophthalmitis who have not died of disseminated disease have required enucleation. A 57-year-old woman had endogenous Candida endophthalmitis developing subsequent to catheter sepsis during hyperalimentation, in which no antimycotic therapy was employed. The endophthalmitis resolved, and good visual acuity was preserved.
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PMID:Spontaneous resolution of endogenous Candida endophthalmitis complicating intravenous hyperalimentation. 80 55

Among fourteen patients with disruption of the thoracic esophagus, the overall mortality rate was 36%. The mortality was greatly reduced in a group of five of these patients who were treated by closed-chest tube drainage and intravenous hyperalimentation. The cause of death in most cases was sepsis and malnutrition. Although the ideal treatment in early cases of eosphageal disruption is thoracotomy and direct suture, it is believed that in patients presenting late, in old and debilitated patients, and in cases of a leaking thoracic anastomosis, the mortality will be greatly improved by the use, primarily, of conservative measures,, with the addition of intravenous hyperlimentation.
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PMID:Management of late cases of esophageal disruption with intravenous hyperalimentation. 80 43

Experience with long-term intravenous hyperalimentation in the hospital and at home in one patient over a 22-month period is reported. After multiple operative procedures the patient was left with only her stomach, duodenum, and 5 cm of the proximal part of the jejunum. During a 12-month period in the hospital, despite many life-threatening complications and with high-output intestinal fistulas, her weight increased from 40.7 kg (90 lb) to 70.1 kg (155 lb) on intravenous hyperalimentation therapy. During the past ten months, the patient has managed her intravenous feeding at home. A silicone elastomer catheter inserted into her superior vena cava through her facial vein has been used for the past ten months with no catheter sepsis. Although costly, home intravenous alimentation seems justifiable in selected patients because of the possible feasibility of bowel transplants in the near future.
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PMID:Successful long-term intravenous hyperalimentation in the hospital and at home. 80 81

Forty patients with a mean age of 56 yrs, all of whom required hemodialysis therapy, for mean of 32 days, were treated with a minimum of 2000 kilocalories of I.V. glucose, potassium orthophosphate with mulit-vitamins and 25 Gm of I.V. albumin. Patients were initially dialyzed daily and then every other day or 3 times/wk. Complications including pneumonia, GI bleeding, gram negative septicemia, shock, the need for tracheostomy and ventialtory assist were high. Overall survival rate was 33%. This survival rate we beleive to be high considering the complicated type of illness these patients had as well as our clinical experience prior to the use of total parenteral nutrition in the manner described in this report. Essential L-amino acids were not used based on our experience in 3 patients with hepatic and renal failure who developed worsening neurological findings with the use of this substance. We believe further that I.V. glucose and albumin may be preferred mode of hyperalimentation.
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PMID:Total parenteral nutrition in acute renal failure. 82 19

From July 1969 to December 1975, 86 patients with 100 fistulas required one or a combination of three modern nutritional aids: central intravenous hyperalimentation; the peripheral intravenous, lipid-amino acid-carbohydrate system; and elemental, nutritionally complete liquid diets. Of the fistulas, 81 closed spontaneously, and in 11 operative closure was attempted; 89 fistulas healed. Eight patients died (9.3%). Before 1969, in an earlier comparable group of patients who had not received such nutrition, the mortality was 40.0%. Fistula drainage and sepsis were controlled. Abscesses were drained. Skin was protected. The most successful way of identifying the nature and origin of a fistula was by instillation of radiopaque liquid into the external opening. Prolonged fistula drainage occurred with distal bowel narrowing and inflammation; previous irradiation to the area; underlying granulomatous bowel disease; bowel adjacent to skin; and foreign bodies in the fistulous tract. Operative closure (resection) was necessary only for distal obstruction and wide breakdown or complete disruption of an anastomosis. Patients who did require operation were in a better nutritional state to withstand operation after receiving specialized nutritional support. Adequate calories and amino acids afforded healing and secretory and mechanical rest for the gastrointestinal tract.
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PMID:Nutritional management of external gastrointestinal fistulas. 82 10

The authors present a report of four personal cases of intestinal fistulas, treated by parenteral hyperalimentation. They describe the technique of parenteral hyperalimentation used. There was one complication due to yeast septicemia from a sub-clavian catheter used for parenteral nutrition. Treatment of the yeast septicemia by amphotericine B was successful. (Acta anaesth. belg., 1976, 27, 35-44).
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PMID:Treatment of intestinal fistulas. Interest of intravenous hyperalimentation. 82 29

Bacterial and fungal growth in 10% soybean oil emulsion (Intralipid) and 5% fibrin hydrolysate in 5% dextrose was studied at 4, 25 and 37 degrees C. Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pyogenes, Str. fecalis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Escherichia coli and Candida albicans were grown in broth at 37 degrees C, diluted in saline and inoculated into each of the two preparations as well as a mixture of the two. Growth was measured at 24, 48 and 72 hours. In 10% soybean emulsion, all bacteria except S. pyogenes multiplied, but in fibrin hydrolysate-dextrose solution the only organism of those studied to grow was S. aureus. In the hydrolysate-dextrose-lipid mixture, all organisms multiplied except S. pyogenes and P. aeruginosa. C. albicans grew in all solutions tested. While at 4 degrees C, organisms did not multiply. The fibrin hydrolysate-dextrose solutions given by infusion into a central vein for hyperalimentation have been shown to support predominantly fungal growth, and contamination of the solution and ultimately of the indwelling catheter is a constant hazard. Because both bacteria and C. albicans grew equally well in 10% soybean oil emulsion, its use as a caloric source when infused into a central vein may increase the occurrence of sepsis. When this emulsion is used to provide essential fatty acids or calories, it should be given via a peripheral vein, so that a central catheter will not be contaminated.
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PMID:Growth of common bacteria and Candida albicans in 10% soybean oil emulsion. 83 63

Candida sepsis has become one of the most common and dangerous forms of hospital acquired infection. The recommended drug for parenteral treatment of Candida sepsis is amphotericin B, however, its toxic effects preclude its usage in many patients, particularly in the presence of renal failure. A less toxic antifungal agent is 5-fluorocytosine. A patient with Candida albicans sepsis was treated successfully with 5-fluorocytosine by intravenous administration. The fungal infection developed during the course of acute renal failure, repeated surgical intervention, intravenous hyperalimentation, gastrointestinal bleeding and five months of antibiotic therapy. The clinical symptoms receded rapidly and cultures became sterile after one week of intravenous treatment. The predisposing factors, difficulties in prevention and diagnosis of fungal infection are discussed.
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PMID:Candida sepsis successfully treated by parenteral administration of 5-fluorocytosine. 96 77

Intestinal fistulization following acute pancreatitis is a complication of abscess formation and may occur after initial surgical drainage. It should be suspected in anyone with protracted pancreatitis in whom an abdominal mass suddenly disappears or in whom gastrointestinal bleeding develops. Although transient improvement may occur, decompression will often be incomplete and will usually be followed by recurrent sepsis or severe life threatening hemorrhage. For this reason, spontaneous fistulization into the intestine does not eliminate the need for adequate surgical drainage. With fistulas into the colon, drainage should be combined with proximal diverting colostomy. Some duodenal fistulas may respond to abscess drainage and intravenously administered hyperalimentation, while others may require drainage plus conversion from a side to an end fistula.
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PMID:Intestinal fistula complicating pancreatic abscess. 108 74

Mycotic Septicaemia (especially with the Candida species) is not an uncommon hazard of hospitalized patients, especially those on intravenous hyperalimentation. Two such patients with endogenous mycotic bilateral endophthalmitis are presented. In spite of typical ocular symptoms diagnosis was delayed. Two further unilateral cases of a more atypical form of endogenous mycotic endophthalmitis in otherwise seemingly healthy patients are also described. Correlating histopathological findings in three of these 4 cases to the clinical histories, conclusions are drawn to aid an early diagnosis which is of paramount importance if the necessary antimyotic treatment is to preserve visual function.
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PMID:[The clinical picture of metastatic myotic endophthalmitis (author's transl)]. 108 40


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