Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We retrospectively evaluated the clinical features and therapeutic outcomes in 13 consecutive patients with the diagnosis of fusiform aneurysm of the vertebrobasilar system. Four patients (31%) presented with compressive symptoms and 10 (77%) with ischemic symptoms; one patient presented with both types of symptoms. No patient presented with rupture of the fusiform aneurysm. Based on the attending physician's choice, treatment included antiplatelet therapy in five patients, anticoagulation in seven, and no medication in one. Five patients died, four treated with antiplatelet agents and one not treated with any medication. The cause of death was progressive brainstem
ischemia
in three,
sepsis
in one, and gastrointestinal bleeding in one patient. All seven patients who received anticoagulants were alive, with no recurrence of symptoms or hemorrhagic complications after a mean follow-up period of 18 months. Based on previous and current series, we conclude that rupture of fusiform aneurysms is rare. Our results suggest a more favorable outcome in the management of these aneurysms with anticoagulation therapy to prevent progressive thrombosis and embolization.
...
PMID:Fusiform aneurysm of the vertebrobasilar arterial system. 259 37
Inflammation is usually a tightly controlled process which confines tissue damage, prevents infection, and assists in cellular regeneration. However, if the inflammatory response becomes unregulated, this normally beneficial local event may escalate into a wider malignant activity, characterized by endothelial injury, excessive cell infiltration, and vascular leakage. Due to the ability of platelet-activating factor and tumor necrosis factor to elicit the release of each other, 'prime' cell responses, and influence the activity of other cytokines, we propose that these two mediators play a pivotal role in the formation of deleterious feedback cycles leading to the above endothelial damage which may underlie pathologies such as shock,
sepsis
,
ischemia
, and asthma. Platelet-activating factor antagonists such as BN 52021 inhibit the priming and other effects induced by platelet-activating factor and thus may be of therapeutic value in such conditions.
...
PMID:Role of cytokines and platelet-activating factor in microvascular immune injury. 265 21
Fifty-five cases of primary (that is, without urinary tract abnormalities), acute pyelonephritis (PN) were studied by computed tomodensitometry (CT). There were 48 women and 7 men. All were febrile and 16 had positive blood cultures. In 7 cases, (4 diabetics and 3 malnourished alcoholics) PN was painless, diagnosis was delayed and lesions were severe. Two diabetics underwent emergency nephrectomy for
sepsis
. Conventional radiological techniques (IVP and ultrasonography) were poorly informative. In contrast, initial CT abnormalities were visible in 44 patients. They consisted of triangular or round hypodense images, diffuse hypodensity in a grossly swollen kidney, and/or abscesses. Hypodense images were presumably due to acute focal
ischemia
. Renal histology was available in five patients. It showed acute interstitial nephritis with leukocyte infiltrates, edema and hemorrhagic streaks. Pyelonephritis was due to E. coli in 48 cases (87.5%). In 27 cases E. coli isolates were studied by genotypic assays which detect the three most frequent (pap, afa and sfa) of the four operons known to encode adhesin. In all cases, at least one of these genotypic markers of uropathogenicity was found. In 27 cases, repeat CT was done shortly after treatment. It showed healing in only 12. Early cortical scar formation was visible in 2. Final evaluation in 27 cases with adequate follow-up showed that (in addition to the 2 patients who had been nephrectomized), in only 17 of 27 (63%) had the kidneys recovered a normal appearance. In two cases one kidney had undergone atrophy; renal biopsy showed subacute-chronic interstitial nephritis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Frequency of development of early cortical scarring in acute primary pyelonephritis. 265 59
Patients who acquire
sepsis
, ARDS, ARF, or MSOF subsequent to multiple trauma have a high mortality rate. The pathophysiology of these complications is complex and is thought to involve
ischemia
, the generation of mediators, alterations in regional perfusion, and cellular oxygen use. Because of the critical nature of the patient with these complications, nursing care requires indepth knowledge as well as competent nursing management, necessitating use of both the art and science of nursing.
...
PMID:Complications of multiple trauma. 267 90
Renal vein thrombosis in early infancy is a complication of dehydration and prolonged hypotension. The onset is usually acute and the most common clinical signs are uni- or bilateral frank masses, hematuria, proteinuria and thrombocytopenia. In most cases, with conservative management, the late outcome is favorable. In the adult, renal vein thrombosis is often a silent complication of the nephrotic syndrome, the hypercoagulability of which may be an important factor in the pathogenesis of the thrombosis. Clinically, the presentation of a sudden complete occlusion is that of severe abdominal and lumbar pain with hematuria and loss of function of the kidney that suffers hemorrhagic infarction. Physical examination often reveals an enlarged kidney. With gradual occlusion, renal function is preserved. The initial diagnostic approach is with ultrasound studies and computed tomography; definitive diagnosis is established by renal venography or by selective renal arteriography. In general, a conservative approach including the use of anticoagulant treatment is preferred to surgical intervention. Priapism is a persistent painful penile erection due to ischemic or non-ischemic causes; therapeutic intracavernosal injection of papaverine is becoming the most common cause. In early and mild stages, aspiration of blood from the corpora cavernosa supplemented with intracavernosal irrigation with alpha-stimulating agents is the procedure of first choice; in late and severe
ischemia
, a shunt procedure may become necessary. Hepatic vein thrombosis occurs in association with a number of conditions considered predisposing factors including the use of oral contraceptives. The clinical picture may be that of an acute illness with abdominal pain, hepatomegaly, ascites and hepatic failure as well as early death. More often, the onset is insidious with slowly developing ascites and wasting. For the diagnosis, hepatic scintigraphy may be helpful but, at present, ultrasonography, computed tomography and magnetic resonance scanning are procedures of choice. There is, as yet, no adequate treatment. A fatal outcome may be prevented by surgical decompression of the congested liver and, in recent years, liver transplantation has been employed. Portal vein thrombosis, in children, is usually considered a complication of umbilical
sepsis
or a result of a congenital abnormality of the portal vein. In adults, the most frequent causes are hepatic cirrhosis and neoplasia. Clinically, there may be a sudden appearance of ascites with resolution in a symptom-free interval until the onset of other features of portal hypertension occur. Currently, ultrasound real-time imaging supplemented with Doppler capability, computed tomography and magnetic resonance scanning provide the necessary diagnostic information. Variceal hemorrhage is often the first major complication requiring treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Thrombosis in particular organ veins. 268 Aug 53
A case of pyogenic liver abscess following successful mesenteric artery revascularization is described in a patient with acute mesenteric
ischemia
. Prior to revascularization, arteriography confirmed celiac and superior mesenteric artery occlusion. Occurrence of liver abscess is explained on the basis of
ischemia
impairing the barrier function of the intestinal mucosa, contributing to portal bacteremia that seeds ischemic or necrotic liver. In patients with acute mesenteric
ischemia
, sequential sonographic examination of the liver following mesenteric revascularization is advocated for early diagnosis of liver abscess if there is clinical evidence of the
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Liver abscess following superior mesenteric artery revascularization for acute mesenteric ischemia. 277 41
This study examines the effects of complement activation and of complement-induced oxygen radical production on the principal determinant of hepatic function, i.e., effective hepatic blood flow (EHBF). Female Sprague-Dawley rats received cobra venom factor, 40 units/kg, in two divided doses at 30-minute intervals. At t = 2 hours, thermodilution cardiac output, mean arterial pressure, heart rate, hematocrit, and EHBF by galactose clearance were determined. Complement activation produced a significant depression in EHBF independent of changes in systemic perfusion. To determine whether oxygen radicals participated in the insult, additional animals were pretreated with superoxide dismutase, 6 mg/kg, plus catalase, 15 mg/kg, immediately before complement activation. Concomitant treatment with the oxygen radical scavengers attenuated the degree of complement-induced hepatic
ischemia
, again independent of effects on systemic perfusion. This study suggests that the reduction in hepatic blood flow that accompanies animal models of trauma and
sepsis
may result, in part, from the sequelae of complement activation with oxygen radicals as secondary mediators.
...
PMID:Contribution of toxic oxygen intermediates to complement-induced reductions in effective hepatic blood flow. 284 55
True stress ulcers are primarily superficial gastric fundic lesions that occur in the clinical setting of severe shock, trauma, burns, and
sepsis
, especially peritonitis. They are to be clearly differentiated from Cushing's ulcers, exacerbation of pre-existent chronic ulcers, and drug-induced gastritis, all of which have completely different pathogenetic mechanisms. The etiology of true stress ulcers is most importantly related to
ischemia
and tissue acidosis, although luminal acid and pepsin are requisite for ulceration to occur. The sole clinical manifestation of stress ulcers is hemorrhage. Prophylaxis with antacids alone, or with a combination of antacids and H2 receptor antagonists is highly efficacious if luminal pH is carefully monitored. The treatment of exsanguinating hemorrhage, once established, carries with it an extremely high morbidity and mortality.
...
PMID:The clinical problem of stress ulcers. 288 24
Sixty-five lower-extremity amputations were performed as a result of
sepsis
in diabetic patients during a 3-year period. Chronic plantar ulcer was the most frequent cause of infection. Other causes of infection included ischemic gangrene, trauma, and web space fissures. Advanced
ischemia
was infrequent; only 21 (32.3%) had ankle-brachial indices (ABI) less than 0.5. Eight (23.5%) deaths and 12 (35.3%) stump failures followed 34 amputations where the stump was closed, compared with no deaths and 4 (12.9%) stump failures when open amputations were done (p less than 0.02). Partial foot amputations with aggressive local debridement resulted in healing in 10 (71.4%) of 14 cases with revision or grafting. Guillotine transmalleolar amputation is advised when foot salvage is not possible, because only 1 (5.9%) of 17 such procedures could not be revised to the below-knee (B-K) level, whereas 8 (33.3%) of 24 definitive, closed B-K amputations were unsuccessful (p less than 0.02). Infections were polymicrobial, with 5.8 bacterial isolates and 2.3 anaerobes recovered per patient. Anaerobic antibiotic coverage, however, failed to alter outcome.
Sepsis
, often without advanced
ischemia
, is an important cause of limb loss in patients with diabetes. Open amputations are recommended, with foot salvage possible in many cases.
...
PMID:The septic foot in patients with diabetes. 290 97
Primary tissue closure of gastroschisis remains controversial. Some surgeons routinely place a silicone rubber sheet silo over the exposed bowel, planning a staged closure. In the past 14 1/2 years, we have cared for 106 newborns with gastroschisis, closing the defect primarily in 80%. The success of this technique depends on enlarging the abdominal cavity and decreasing the volume of bowel that must be replaced in the peritoneal cavity. Thorough preoperative rectal irrigation should evacuate all meconium. After undermining the skin around the abdominal wall defect for only 1 cm, a midline subcutaneous fasciotomy is created from the xiphoid to the pubis. The abdominal wall is then stretched in all quadrants beginning at the flanks. The eviscerated small bowel can often be returned without enlarging the initial skin defect. The skin is closed with subcuticular absorbable sutures reinforced by long skin tapes. The small ventral hernia that results is closed at about 1 year of age. Fascia could be closed primarily in 28% of these patients, and 17% required a prosthetic pouch. The duration of postoperative ileus and length of hospital stay were statistically significantly shorter in the infants who underwent primary closure. Even though more complicated patients were included in the primary closure group, the incidence of mortality and morbidity was not higher than in patients treated with silicone rubber pouches. Deaths were inevitable in five infants with gangrenous bowel, multiple anomalies, and extreme prematurity. Deaths were related to
sepsis
in three infants and were the result of operative or anesthetic technique in four. Only two preoperative factors were prognostic of morbidity and mortality: gestational age (but not birth weight) and the presence of intestinal
ischemia
or atresia.
...
PMID:Gastroschisis in 106 consecutive newborn infants. 293 43
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>