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

Skin tests (ST) in 1332 patients are associated with increased morbidity from sepsis. Patients with normal skin tests had a 7% major sepsis rate and 2% mortality rate. Thirty-six per cent of anergic (A) patients and 21% of relatively anergic (RA) patients died; 52% of A patients and 34% of RA patients had sepsis. These data include all patients studied and represent their worst skin test. Two studies were done. The first was a retrospective evaluation of effect of surgery upon 49 anergic patients with biliary tract disease, colon cancer, bowel obstruction, hypovolemia and visceral abscesses. The patients did not receive total parenteral nutrition (TPN). The data show that surgery without TPN can reverse the anergic state and did so in 84% of patients reported. The second study was a prospective, double-blind, randomized trial of the effect of levamisole on skin tests, neutrophil chemotaxis (CTX), sepsis and mortality iin 39 preoperative anergic patients. Major sepsis was significantly increased in placebo group (p less than 0.05). Mortality, minor sepsis, restoration of skin tests and chemotaxis were somewhat better in levamisole patients but not statistically so. These studies show that in addition to TPN, surgery and immunorestorative drugs are viable approaches to the management of selected anergic patients.
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PMID:Therapeutic approaches to anergy in surgical patients. Surgery and levamisole. 11 27

In a kindred with a familial visceral myopathy, seven patients had operations seeking relief of chronic abdominal pain and other symptoms of intestinal obstruction; one patient had an 80% cystectomy and a Y-V-plasty of the bladder neck for urinary retention. Five patients with megaduodenum had bypass operations; a side-to-side duodenojejunostomy was done in four and a retrocolic gastrojejunostomy in one. Two of these died of postoperative complications, and one developed symptomatic adhesions. Two other patients who had duodenojejunostomy have done well for 6 years and 1 1/2 years respectively. One patient with dilation of the distal jejunum and proximal ileum had relief of intestinal obstructive symptoms from jejunostomy to decompress the destal jejunum. One patient who had a resection of the descending and sigmoid colon for sigmoid volvulus has done well for four years. Three of these seven patients developed peritonitis postoperatively, and two had symptomatic adhesions after operations. Duodenal aspiration from a patient who developed postoperative peritonitis grew E. coli, 10(13) colonies per ml. After review of the results of operations in other families and in our kindred, we favor side-to-side duodenojejunostomy in megaduodenum. Duodenal aspirate must be cultured before operation. Evidence of bacterial overgrowth in the aspirate should prompt appropriate antibiotic treatment to reduce the likelihood of sepsis.
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PMID:Surgical treatment in familial visceral myopathy. 42 61

Ten patients with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia (Fredrickson type II) were treated by the operation of partial ileal bypass. Postoperatively, serum cholesterol levels fell by an average of 34% (P less than 0.005), and the decrease was satisfactorily sustained over a period of 12-30 months. Angina and xanthomas also improved in some patients. Postoperatively all patients experienced considerable diarrhoea, which lessened with time. Other complications of surgery included abdominal distension and cramps, colonic dilatation, sepsis and intestinal obstruction. It is concluded that partial ileal bypass significantly lowers serum cholesterol levels, but that in view of the complications the operation should be offered only to carefully selected patients who are intolerant of or unresponsive to conservative measures.
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PMID:Treatment of familial hypercholesterolaemia by partial ileal bypass. 44 62

This study is an evaluation of the infectious risk related to neonatal surgery in 300 patients between 1968 and 1978, and its consequences to mortality and morbidity. Bacteriological species, circumstances, chronology of infection, related to each type of surgical pathology prove the endogenous way of contamination to be usual and predominant. When intestinal obstruction occurs, the risk of hematogenous diffusion is directly dependent from local stasis and bacterial pullulation which can be evaulated with duodenal, jejunal or fecal samples. Both mechanical factors and antibiotictherapy can induce qualitative and quantitative changes in bacterial flora of the bowel, and then increase the incidence of endogenous septicemia.
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PMID:[The infectious risk in neonatal surgery : an evaluation of frequency and consequences from a study of 300 cases (author's transl)]. 54 67

The roentgenographic finding hepatic--portal venous gas (HPVG) has been reported extensively in the pediatric and radiology literature. The surgical implications and clinical significance have yet to be fully defined. This study reviews the 60 reported cases in the literature and adds four new cases. HPVG appears as a branching radiolucency extending to within 2 cm of the liver capsule. HPVG is associated with necrotic bowel (72%), ulcerative colitis (8%), intra abdominal abscess (6%), small bowel obstruction (3%), and gastric ulcer (3%). Mucosal damage, bowel distention and sepsis predispose to HPVG. The current mortality rate of 75% represents an improvement from previous experience. Analysis of survivors indicates that the finding of HPVG requires urgent surgical exploration except when it is observed in patients with stable ulcerative colitis.
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PMID:Hepatic--portal venous gas in adults: etiology, pathophysiology and clinical significance. 63 84

A five year experience with 782 patients requiring laparotomy for trauma is reviewed. Specifically, the 70 patients requiring unplanned reexploration have been studied to delineate the indications for and implications of such repeat laparotomies. The major indications for such reoperation were intraabdominal abscess (45.7 per cent), bleeding (15.5 per cent), peritonitis (12.1 per cent), and small bowel obstruction (8.6 per cent). There were 16 negative reexplorations (13.8 per cent). Overall mortality in the reexplored patients was 21.4 per cent, all victims of gunshot or blunt trauma. Mortality correlated with the number of required reexplorations, being 67 per cent in those requiring four operations. Of the 31 laparotomies performed initially for diffuse or localized intraabdominal sepsis, only 15 were highly suspected, and 13 of these by simple chest x-ray findings. If after laparotomy for repair of intraabdominal trauma a patient fails to meet the anticipated norm of convalescence, a high index of suspicion for early postoperative hemorrhage, or later sepsis, should be maintained. Such patients have far more to gain than lose by reexploration.
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PMID:Reoperation after abdominal trauma. 66 94

Performance of gastrointestinal anastomosis by means of surgical stapling devices has achieved popularity in the last decade even though no detailed study has been reported comparing complications following the stapled anastomosis with those following hand sutured procedures performed by the same surgeons. We have reviewed 812 operative procedures on the gastrointestinal tract performed in one hospital over a four year period. Stapled anastomoses were performed in 472 with 13 (2.8%) complications related to the anastomosis; in 296 sutured anastomoses there were nine (3.0%) related complications. Comparison did not disclose any significant difference in the number of complications in these two groups. In 44 instances wherein the anastomosis contained both staples and sutures, there were no related complications. Further analysis of the patients in each group disclosed that stapling procedures were utilized in a much higher percentage of those operations which were performed under emergency conditions or in the presence of intra-abdominal sepsis, intestinal obstruction, and carcinomatosis. If the technical details of surgical stapling are mastered, this technique appears to be as safe as suturing in the performance of anastomoses in the gastrointestinal tract.
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PMID:The stapled gastrointestinal tract anastomosis: incidence of postoperative complications compared with the sutured anastomosis. 71 96

Resort to laparotomy for the staging of Hodgkin's disease has been controversial because of its questionable advantage over nonsurgical staging methods. The recent concern over splenectomy and subsequent overwhelming infection has added to this debate. The author reviews experience with Hodgkin's disease in 34 patients whose ages ranged from 6 to 18 years. Seventeen patients underwent staging laparotomy after their disease had been staged by standard nonoperative methods; the duration of follow-up was from 2 to 7 years. In 7 of these 17 patients the stage of their disease was changed as a result of the laparotomy findings. Complications have been late septicemia resulting in death in one patient and subacute bowel obstruction not requiring reoperation in two patients. In the author's opinion staging laparotomy in children with Hodgkin's disease is a valuable means of deciding on their subsequent therapy.
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PMID:Staging laparotomy for Hodgkin's disease in children. 71 63

An unexpectedly high morbidity (28 per cent) followed colostomy closure in 100 patients. One patient died postoperatively because of sepsis resulting from disruption of the colon anastomosis. Wound infection (10 per cent), intraperitoneal abscess (1 per cent), bowel obstruction (7 per cent), and fecal fistula (4 per cent) were other significant complications. Wound sepsis was greater after primary than after delayed wound closure. Obstruction did not correlate with the use of either an open or closed technic of anastomosis. Three patients required reoperation for complications. Temporary colostomy was constructed for colon injury in 85 per cent of patients. In view of the considerable morbidity of colostomy closure, alternate technics of managing colon trauma should be considered. Such technics include primary closure and exteriorization of repaired colon. When temporary colostomy is unavoidable, closure is best done by open, two layer anastomosis with delayed wound closure. Colostomy should be recognized as an important procedure associated with significant morbidity.
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PMID:Morbidity of colostomy closure. 78 53

Infantile transmural ulcerative enteritis is a disorder of early infancy characterized by feeding difficulties, intermittent and progressive diarrhea, cachexia, anemia, abdominal distention, and small-bowel dilation which may progress to intestinal obstruction. The pathologic process, of unknown etiology, involves a transmural enteritis with deep undermining mucosal ulceration, not unlike that seen in Crohn's disease, except that granulomas are usually not present. The early stages of the diseases may be reversible if the bowel is simply placed at rest by use of intravenous nutrition. In the later stages of the illness, there is progressive mechanical and functional intestinal obstruction due to inflammatory constriction of the distal small bowel and lack of effective peristalsis through the inflammed segments. The terminal stages are characterized by marked abdominal distention, complete obstruction, septicemia, and death. It is during the period of abdominal distention due to progressive intestinal obstruction that surgical intervention is of benefit. A cutaneous enterostomy proximal to the involved segments of small intestine serves to decompress the bowel, to minimize bacteremia, and to allow the distal inflamed intestine to heal. Total intravenous nutrition is mandatory for a period of several weeks until there is healing of the distal small bowel and closure of the enterostomy. In all surviving infants, bowel function has returned to normal and there have been no long-term sequelae or recurrences.
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PMID:Surgical management of infantile ulcerative enteritis. 80 75


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