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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Prior studies of vascular rejection in transplanted human hearts have stressed the importance of accelerated coronary arteriosclerosis (chronic vascular rejection). We, however, have had four patients with sudden onset of acute heart failure within 90 days of transplantation who have died without significant myocardial interstitial rejection or the concentric intimal thickening with dense collagen that is typical of chronic vascular rejection. In contrast, the coronary arteries in our patients had a prominent lymphocytic infiltrate, a loosely organized intimal thickening composed of smooth muscle cells, and extensive endothelial injury. We believe that these changes define acute vascular rejection of the coronary artery. In 14 transplanted hearts obtained consecutively, at autopsy or at a second transplant procedure, graft failure was caused by acute coronary vascular rejection in six cases and by chronic coronary vascular rejection in one case. The remaining seven patients showed no evidence of vascular rejection and died primarily of
sepsis
. Cytomegalovirus (CMV) disease was present in 6 of 7 patients with vascular rejection, of which 43% were CMV-negative recipients of hearts from CMV-positive donors. The adoption of a triple-drug protocol, in which azathioprine was added to cyclosporine and prednisone, reduced the incidence of acute vascular rejection from 27% to 8%. We conclude that acute coronary vascular rejection may be initially seen as global cardiac
ischemia
in the absence of significant interstitial myocardial rejection. Further, acute vascular rejection should be pathologically distinguished from chronic vascular rejection, although both are probably stages in the natural history of immune-mediated vascular injury.
...
PMID:Acute vascular rejection of the coronary arteries in human heart transplantation: pathology and correlations with immunosuppression and cytomegalovirus infection. 165 3
The clinical experience following transplantation of livers obtained from non-heart-beating cadaver donors (NHBD) with the use of core cooling method is presented here. Six livers procured from such cadavers were transplanted into 6 recipients with hepatoma involving right and left lobes but without distant metastases. The first liver subjected to 75 minutes of warm
ischemia
had insufficient function after transplantation. The recipient died of graft failure 54 days later. The other 5 livers with 32 to 45 minutes of warm
ischemia
had a good or excellent immediate function. These 5 recipients died of tumor recurrence, acute rejection or
septicemia
131 to 261 days after transplantation. The utilization of selected NHBD is suggested by our practice as a possible approach to help alleviate the acute organ shortage in the areas where heart-beating cadaver donors of brain death are not available.
...
PMID:The results of transplant livers from selected non-heart-beating cadaver donors. 166 89
The effect of
ischemia
on hepatic protein synthesis during
sepsis
is not known, but is of clinical relevance, since hepatic blood flow decreases during the late phase of
sepsis
. In this study, synthesis of acute-phase proteins was measured in perfused livers of rats 16 hours after sham operation or cecal ligation and puncture. Livers from each group had 45 minutes of complete
ischemia
or control perfusion. Protein synthesis was measured during two hour perfusion after the
ischemia
or control period, by determining incorporation of 3H-leucine into total secreted trichloracetic acid precipitated proteins, immunoprecipitated complement component C3 and albumin and phosphotungstenate-precipitated alpha 1-acid glycoprotein. Lactate, glutamine-oxalacetic transaminase (GOT) and glutamic-pyruvic transaminase (GPT) levels in the perfusate were measured during preischemic and postischemic perfusion. Tissue glutathione levels were measured at the end of the perfusion. Synthesis of alpha 1-acid glycoprotein was increased by 100 per cent and albumin synthesis decreased by 46 per cent in septic livers, consistent with an acute-phase response and apparent downregulation of albumin synthesis during early
sepsis
. Synthesis rates were reduced by 50 to 60 per cent after
ischemia
in perfused livers from sham operated rats and 70 to 80 per cent in livers from septic rats. Hepatic production of interleukin-1 was not different between the groups during perfusion. GOT and GPT levels increased significantly during
ischemia
of both nonseptic and septic livers and rapidly returned toward baseline during reperfusion. Lactate levels were higher in perfusate of septic than of nonseptic livers before
ischemia
and increased further during
ischemia
. The results suggest that
ischemia
inhibits production of secreted hepatic proteins similarly in nonseptic and septic livers, but perhaps to a slightly greater extent in septic livers.
...
PMID:Effect of ischemia on protein synthesis in the septic liver. 170 61
This elderly male with a long history of alcohol abuse presented with an acute pleural trauma and hemopneumothorax, which may have served as the precipitating medical illness for cecal volvulus. He subsequently developed bacterial peritonitis as a complication of his bowel obstruction. It is probable that his pleural cavity was seeded hematogenously via a bacteremia from his peritonitis, thus accounting for the empyema with species typical of bowel flora. Cecal bascule is a type of cecal volvulus that causes intestinal obstruction. Diagnosis is difficult, but a delay in recognition may result in intestinal
ischemia
, perforation,
sepsis
, and even death. Cecal
ischemia
or gangrene cannot always be determined based on physical examination or laboratory findings. Plain films of the abdomen may be helpful, and barium enema has been advocated by some authors. However, laparotomy is often necessary for definitive diagnosis and therapy. While cecal volvulus has not been reported to occur frequently in the elderly, the relatively common occurrence of anatomic predisposition in addition to the widespread use of respirators and the increasing age and number of medical illnesses of our population make it possible that cecal volvulus will be seen with increasing frequency in the future.
...
PMID:Cecal bascule: an overlooked diagnosis in the elderly. 172 51
We have previously shown the safety and efficacy of University of Wisconsin solution for hypothermic preservation of the human donor heart in a pilot group of 16 transplant recipients. The present study is a randomized clinical trial comparing University of Wisconsin solution to conventional preservation using crystalloid cardioplegia and saline storage within a 4-hour limit of
ischemia
. Heart transplant recipients (n = 42) were randomized into two groups: those receiving hearts preserved by University of Wisconsin solution, the UWS group (n = 22), and those receiving hearts preserved in the conventional manner, the CCS group (n = 20). Recipient age, gender, heart disease, and preoperative inotropic support and donor age, gender, and mean ischemic time in hours (UWS 2 hours 36 minutes, range 1 hour 36 minutes to 2 hours 53 minutes; CCS 2 hours 20 minutes, range 1 hour 20 minutes to 2 hours 44 minutes; p = not significant) were similar. Significant differences observed between the two groups included (1) mean time (minutes) from reperfusion to achieve a stable rhythm, (2) need for intraoperative defibrillations, (3) need for transient cardiac pacing, and (4) integrated postoperative creatinine kinase and aspartate aminotransferase release over 48 hours. There was no difference in postoperative electrocardiogram, endomyocardial biopsy, or hemodynamics. One UWS patient died of
sepsis
and another of a ruptured cerebral aneurysm. UWS is safe for donor organ arrest and preservation despite high viscosity and potassium concentration. When compared with CCS hearts, hearts preserved in UWS regained electrical activity more rapidly and had better myocardial protection as demonstrated by enzymatic analysis. Further investigation is required to determine the effects of UWS preservation on long-term survival, to determine the prevalence of rejection and graft atherosclerosis, and to test the ability of UWS to extend donor ischemic time in human cardiac transplantation.
...
PMID:University of Wisconsin solution versus crystalloid cardioplegia for human donor heart preservation. A randomized blinded prospective clinical trial. 173 83
Although the shock syndrome is recognized as a form of "mediator poisoning", a plethora of details is hardly converging into a coherent concept of chronological and molecular order. As a model for organ failure in septic shock, three alternative experimental approaches with a common pathology are presented: When galactosamine-sensitized mice receive either lipopolysaccharide or leukotriene D4 or tumor necrosis factor alpha they develop fulminant hepatitis within few hours with a lethal outcome within one day. Detailed pharmacological intervention studies allow to conclude that endotoxin-induced leukotriene D4 release induces a transient
ischemia
by the known vasoconstrictive action of this eicosanoid. A following reperfusion/reoxygenation phase gives rise to superoxide formation which inactivates alpha 1 proteinase inhibitor. Thus a serine protease becomes active which is responsible for the processing of a monocytic tumor necrosis factor alpha precursor to be released into the circulation after proteolytic cleavage. By this sequence the final central mediator of shock and
sepsis
becomes systematically abundant. The concept arising from these studies reconciles previously known findings and provides a link between the role of reactive oxygen species in inflammation, the balance of proteases and antiproteases in the extracellular space and the release of the cytokine tumor necrosis factor in
sepsis
and shock.
...
PMID:Reactive oxygen species, antiproteases, and cytokines in sepsis. 179 93
The authors describe a case of fatal acetaminophen overdose which occurred in a 16-year-old female. Her serum acetaminophen concentration 11.5 h postingestion was 154 mg/L. Antidotal therapy was unsuccessful, and after 9 days she died. Autopsy findings included centrilobular zonal liver necrosis, acute proximal renal tubular necrosis, and diffuse alveolar pulmonary damage. Her heart was transplanted into a young woman with congenital heart disease. The recipient expired 14 days after the transplant as a result of
sepsis
complicating bowel
ischemia
. The transplanted heart showed extensive subendocardial myocyte necrosis related to acetaminophen toxicity and not rejection.
...
PMID:Fatal acetaminophen poisoning with evidence of subendocardial necrosis of the heart. 185 55
Sepsis
, shock, and resuscitation may result in various degrees of
ischemia
-perfusion injury that may produce widespread organ dysfunction through complex interactions and activation of host immunoinflammatory processes. As the pathophysiologic mechanisms of the inflammatory response are better defined, we may be able to modulate the generalized inflammatory state we know as
sepsis
and prevent the development of multiple organ failure syndrome. At present, however, the mainstay of therapy remains prompt resuscitation to eliminate regions of hypoperfusion and to limit as much as possible those factors that predispose to further organ injury while the source of inflammatory stimulation is being identified and controlled.
...
PMID:Sepsis. What it is and how to recognize it. 186 69
Between January 1, 1980, and June 30, 1989, 9 patients (6 males and 3 females) developed ischemic injury to the spinal cord or lumbosacral plexus following 3,320 operations on the abdominal aorta (0.3%). The incidence of this complication was 0.1% (2 of 1,901) after elective and 1.4% (3 of 210) after emergency abdominal aortic aneurysm repair, and 0.3% (4 of 1,209) after repair for occlusive disease. Three of the latter had prior clinical evidence of distal embolization. Eight grafts were bifurcated (aorto-iliac:four, aorto-femoral: three, aorto-ilio-femoral:one). One patient underwent extra-anatomic revascularization. Only two patients had supraceliac aortic cross-clamping and one patient underwent exclusion of both internal iliac arteries. Four patients had hypotension. Early mortality was 22% (two of nine). Severe perioperative complications, mostly due to associated visceral and somatic
ischemia
and
sepsis
, were present in seven of the nine patients. The extent and type of the neurologic injury correlated with long-term outcome. Patients with ischemic injury of the lumbosacral roots or plexus had better recovery. Attention to the pelvic circulation and the collateral blood supply is important. Use of gentle technique to prevent embolization, avoidance of hypotension and prolonged supraceliac cross-clamping, revascularization of at least one internal iliac artery, and the use of heparin may decrease but not eliminate paraplegia. Once this unexpected complication occurs, careful neurologic evaluation should be done to localize the lesion and aid prognosis.
...
PMID:Ischemic injury to the spinal cord or lumbosacral plexus after aorto-iliac reconstruction. 186 33
Models for the study of prosthetic vascular graft infection have been studied frequently in the dog and rabbit. We have developed a reproducible swine model to study this problem and its treatment. The cardiovascular system, healing characteristics, and the bloodstream clearance of bacteria in swine more closely resembles those of humans than do other animal models. The low cost and availability of the swine is an additional attractive aspect. One hundred fifty-six farm-bred pigs have undergone infrarenal aortic replacement with a 3-cm segment of 6-mm prosthetic graft over the past two years. Graft infection was produced by (1) direct inoculation of 10(6) Staphylococcus aureus at the time of the surgery or (2) intravenous infusion of bacteria (10(2)-10(6) organisms/mL) immediately after surgery. All animals were sacrificed 1 to 4 weeks later, depending on the study design. Cultures, histology, and electron microscopy were performed on each graft. Anesthetic complications were rare (2.5%). Postoperative complications leading to animal death decreased with increasing experience (11.5%), but included graft thrombosis, bleeding,
sepsis
, intussusception, and colonic
ischemia
. Wound infection was the most common cause of morbidity. The swine model is an attractive alternative to that of other animals for the study of prosthetic vascular graft infections. Further details of the operative technique and the comparison to the human and other animal models is discussed.
...
PMID:Porcine model for vascular graft studies. 186 86
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