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

Monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) that recognize the neutrophil (PMN) adherence complex CD11/CD18 inhibit PMN adherence to endothelium and attenuate PMN-mediated ischemia-reperfusion injury. One consideration regarding the clinical usefulness of such therapy is whether transient inhibition of PMN adherence or function will impede host defense and increase susceptibility to infection and sepsis. We studied susceptibility to sepsis in New Zealand white rabbits with an appendiceal devascularization model to answer the question: Does inhibition of PMN adherence with the anti-CD18 MAb 60.3 increase morbidity and mortality rates in abdominal sepsis? Four treatment groups of 10 animals each were studied: group 1 (controls) received no treatment, group 2 received MAb 60.3, group 3 was given the antibiotic cefazolin alone, and group 4 received both cefazolin and MAb 60.3. PMN emigration into the peritoneum was inhibited significantly in MAb 60.3-treated animals (groups 2 and 4). There was no difference in weight loss, incidence of infectious complications, or mortality rates when MAb 60.3-treated animals were compared with untreated animals. These results demonstrate that transient inhibition of PMN adherence does not increase morbidity or mortality rates in this model of abdominal sepsis. These results suggest that if MAb 60.3 or similar antibodies are used to prevent PMN-mediated injury, they will not increase susceptibility to sepsis.
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PMID:Transient inhibition of neutrophil adherence with the anti-CD18 monoclonal antibody 60.3 does not increase mortality rates in abdominal sepsis. 200 54

Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) facilitates superoxide production, and spin traps may detoxify superoxide by acting as superoxide dismutase mimics. We investigated the ability of a stable nitroxide spin trap, TEMPOL, to protect TNF-sensitive cells from exogenously added TNF. WEHI or L929 cells were incubated with TNF (500 units/ml) for 18 hr either simultaneously with 0 to 8 mM TEMPOL or with the TEMPOL added at varying intervals after TNF exposure. A dose-dependent increase in survival was noted in the TEMPOL-treated cells, with 92 +/- 2% survival of WEHIs treated with 4 mM TEMPOL compared to 26 +/- 1% survival for non-TEMPOL-exposed cells (P2 less than 0.01). Significant increases in survival could be accomplished with as late as 15-hr delayed addition of the compound. The mechanism of protection does not seem to involve newly synthesized protein, and Northern blot analysis revealed that TEMPOL does not induce the genes for MnSOD or Cu-ZnSOD. The ability of TEMPOL to protect against TNF injury, even when exposure is delayed, may prove useful in conditions thought to be associated with free radical-lymphokine interactions such as ischemia-reperfusion, oxygen toxicity, or sepsis.
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PMID:Spin trap protection from tumor necrosis factor cytotoxicity. 203 86

Bacterial translocation (BT) occurs transiently after thermal injury and may result from an ischemic intestinal insult. To evaluate continued intestinal ischemia in the ongoing BT associated with sepsis after injury, rats were randomized to (1) 30% burn injury with Pseudomonas wound infection (BI), (2) BI + fluid resuscitation (BI + Fluid), (3) BI after allopurinol pretreatment to inhibit xanthine oxidase (BI + Allo), or (4) BI after azapropazone pretreatment to inhibit neutrophil degranulation (BI + Aza). On postburn days (PBD) 1, 4, and 7, animals were studied for evidence of BT and intestinal lipid peroxidation. BI + Fluid, BI + Allo, and BI + Aza significantly (p less than 0.05) reduced rates of BT and ileal lipid peroxidation acutely after thermal injury (PBD 1) compared to BI. All four groups had equally high rates of BT associated with the onset of sepsis (PBDs 4 and 7), without evidence of further intestinal lipid peroxidation. These data indicate that the chronic gut barrier failure associated with sepsis after injury occurs independently of continued intestinal ischemia.
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PMID:Differential pathophysiology of bacterial translocation after thermal injury and sepsis. 206 68

Transient episodes of gut mucosal ischemia occur in many patients having cardiac surgery. Ischemic mucosal injury increases mucosal permeability and promotes the translocation of bacterial toxins and bacteria and, hence, the release of mediators. Collectively these substances are the putative cause of LOS, nosocomial infections, and MSOF. Circumstantial evidence suggests that the morbidity and mortality from cardiac surgery might be greatly reduced by preventing or limiting in duration the episodes of gut mucosal ischemia. This objective is unlikely to be reliably achieved in clinical practice without monitoring the adequacy of gut mucosal oxygenation. The adequacy of gut mucosal oxygenation can be conveniently monitored in the stomach with a Tonomitor incorporated into a nasogastric tube, because changes induced in this organ by disturbances in DO2 reflect changes occurring in other parts of the gut. Preventative measures currently possible in routine clinical practice include maintaining an intramucosal pH at normal levels by optimizing DO2, preventing the release of splanchnic vasoconstrictors and the formation of cellular aggregates by the use of pulsatile perfusion during bypass, and minimizing oxygen requirements with cooling and muscle relaxation. The translocation of bacterial toxins and bacteria across injured mucosa may be minimized by gut lavage before surgery. Therapeutic measures for gut mucosal ischemia currently possible in routine clinical practice include, in addition to the preventative measures outlined above, the prevention of free radical-induced mucosal injury during resuscitation, parenteral antibiotics, the treatment of sepsis, and the resection of infarcted gut.
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PMID:Gut mucosal ischemia during cardiac surgery. 209 99

In 14 newborns with gastroschisis, fascial closure was effected by muscular suture associated with teflon mesh prosthesis interposition. This was realized either in urgency during neonatal period (9), either secondly (5). Neonatal cases were treated between 0 h 30 and 5 h of age. Pulmonary hyper-pressure risk was very important when primary suture was early employed (card freq: 150 b. min-1. PA syst: 60 cm Hg; pulm pres: 20 cm Hg). When we used a teflon mesh prosthesis, we had 8 good results and only one initial death. 5 complications were represented by cutaneous ischemia which spontaneously disappeared (1), ischemia with infection and partial necrosis (2), important necrosis with teflon mesh prosthesis exteriorization (2). It has been definitely possible to achieve complete fascial in 7 newborns. Only one of them had a little ventral hernia. 5 newborns were early treated by simple skin coverage (Gross) as primary management. They have had teflon mesh prosthesis between 5 and 14 M of age and have undergone excision of the teflon mesh prosthesis and fascial repair without difficulty (5 good results). With teflon mesh prosthesis for treating congenital abdominal defects, abdominal hyper-pressure and pulmonary complications are exceptional. Local complications are very limited because of good vascular conditions. We did not have any adherences because of teflon mesh prosthesis good biological and histological tolerance. Digestive complications (statis, septicemia...) have been few and mild because physiological intra abdominal pressure has been early obtained.
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PMID:[Laparoschisis. Indications for a teflon patch in wall repair]. 214 1

The presence of HPVG has been said to constitute a mandatory indication for exploratory laparotomy, given the high incidence of concomitant bowel necrosis and abdominal sepsis. HPVG has also been associated with increased intraluminal pressure in the absence of bowel ischemia. Most cases are iatrogenic, usually due to barium enema or colonoscopy in patients with inflammatory bowel disease, but in a few cases, HPVG is associated with simple intestinal or gastric distention. The English literature on the subject describes only eight such cases. We recently treated a patient in whom HPVG was caused by intestinal pseudo-obstruction. Such an etiologic mechanism has not been previously reported. The relevance of this observation and a reassessment of the absolute obligation to operate prompted this review.
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PMID:Does the presence of hepatic portal venous gas mandate an operation? A reassessment. 218 76

The presence of acute transient synovitis (TS, irritable hip) often warrants hospital admission not only to exclude underlying sepsis but also to aspirate when the intraarticular pressure might induce ischemia in the femoral head. Diagnostic doubt may affect this admission. We evaluated 68 patients in a prospective study comparing sonography with diagnostic aspiration and clinical examination. Sonography proved to be relatively accurate (81%) but was inferior to careful clinical evaluation in diagnosing hip effusions. Sonography may be helpful if diagnostic doubt exists. Aspiration under sonographic control will improve this accuracy.
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PMID:Accuracy of sonography in transient synovitis. 219 36

Of 27 patients admitted to our level I trauma center with acute disruption of the thoracic aorta, two patients died of exsanguination before aortic repair. One patient had massive leakage from the aneurysm after aortography and died during surgery. All patients suffered from multiple injuries. Eighty-three percent of the patients had major operations in addition to the aortic repair. "Clamp and sew" technique was used in 18 patients (75%), two of whom had multiple tears of the aortic arch. Heparin-coated shunts were used in five patients (20.8%), and a cardiopulmonary bypass was performed in one patient who had multiple tears. Three postoperative deaths were related to polytrauma, cardiogenic shock, and sepsis. Paraplegia developed in three patients, two of whom had multiple aortic lesions necessitating longer ischemia time during the repair. Only one patient had complete neurologic deficit at the 1-year follow-up. In our series, neither surgical procedure proved superior. We conclude that the "clamp and sew" technique for repair of the disrupted thoracic aorta may allow for a more favorable outcome.
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PMID:Traumatic disruptions of the thoracic aorta: treatment and outcome. 223 67

We report a patient with the syndrome of large granular lymphocytes in whom the initial clinical features were polyarthritis, hepatosplenomegaly and neutropenia. Relative lymphocytosis was also demonstrated at the expense of a subpopulation with morphology and surface markers characteristic of large granular lymphocytes (CD2+, CD8+, CD16+ and HNK-1+). After 6 months of asymptomatic course, without changes in clinical or laboratory data, the patient died from an acute abdomen with mesenteric ischemia of different likely causes as suggested by necropsy data (multivisceral diffuse infiltrate by large granular lymphocytes, systemic vasculitis and Clostridium sepsis). The association between this syndrome and systemic vasculitis is discussed.
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PMID:[Vasculitis associated with proliferation of large granular lymphocytes]. 225 May 16

The aim of this study was to investigate the oxygenation of the gastrointestinal tract mucosa using indirect pH measurements in a porcine septic model (intravenous infusion of live E. coli). By means of intraluminally placed balloon catheters (Tonomitior) permeable to CO2, intramucosal pH (pHi) was calculated using the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation. Cardiopulmonary hemodynamics and portal blood flow were measured using Swan-Ganz catheters. Samples were taken from the gastrointestinal tract for histological examination. Nine pigs were given i.v. E. coli infusion while six pigs served as sham controls and were given an equivalent amount of Ringer's solution only. All septic animals developed hemodynamic signs of septic shock. Gastric, small intestinal and sigmoid colonic pHi decreased gradually during the four hour observation period. In the small intestine and the sigmoid colon the decrease was significant already after one hour (p less than 0.01 and p less than 0.02, respectively). Microscopic examination of tissue specimens obtained 4 hours following induction of sepsis revealed normal or close to normal findings in all the sham and in more than half of the septic animals. These findings indicate that abnormally low gastrointestinal intramucosal pH may be found early in septicemia, preceding microscopically detectable damage by several hours. It is concluded that the tonometer technique does provide early detection of gastrointestinal ischemia in septic shock.
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PMID:Early detection of gastrointestinal mucosal ischemia in porcine E. coli sepsis. 226 40


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