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

In this prospective multicenter study, the effect of early ERCP within 72 hours after the beginning of symptoms in the treatment of acute biliary pancreatitis was investigated. 100 patients with acute biliary pancreatitis but without biliary sepsis or obstructive jaundice were randomized in this trial. 48 patients of the invasive group received urgent ERCP within 72 hours after the beginning of pain. 52 patients of the conventional group received ERCP only if biliary sepsis or obstructive jaundice occurred during the clinical course of the disease (which was the case in 10 patients). Sphincterotomy and stone extraction were undertaken if bile duct stones were identified during ERCP. In the invasive group, ERCP was successfully performed in 44 cases (92%). In 19 of these patients (43%), common bile duct stones were identified and a sphincterotomy was performed. The stones could be removed completely during the first ERCP examination in 16 cases. In the conventional group, 2 patients died from pancreatitis within 3 months, versus 4 patients in the invasive group. Cholecystitis occurred significantly more often in the conventional group (11 versus 4; odds ratio OR = 5.1), but no patient with cholecystitis or cholangitis died. Cholangitis (OR = 3.3) and sepsis (OR = 3.5) were slightly more frequent in the conventional group (not significant) while renal failure (OR = 0.5) and pulmonary failure (OR = 0.8) were slightly more frequent in the invasive group (not significant). Jaundice (6 patients) only occurred in the conventional group. In this multicenter study, it is concluded that early ERCP is not superior to conventional treatment in patients with acute biliary pancreatitis. On the other hand, patients with biliary complications (jaundice, sepsis, cholangitis) should receive urgent ERCP. However, most bile duct stones which initiate a pancreatitis pass spontaneously into the duodenum. The vast majority of patients suffering from biliary pancreatitis without biliary sepsis or obstructive jaundice require only elective ERCP when remaining bile duct stones are assumed. The lethality of biliary pancreatitis without initial biliary complications (sepsis, jaundice) tends to be elevated rather than diminished by emergency ERCP.
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PMID:Urgent ERCP in all cases of acute biliary pancreatitis? A prospective randomized multicenter study. 938 73

We report the case of a 65-year-old patient who was diagnosed with large-cell lymphoma arising and remaining localized in the porta hepatis, causing obstructive jaundice, and resulting into ascending cholangitis, septicemia, and acute renal failure. We discuss how jaundice can be a manifestation of both Hodgkins and non-Hodgkins lymphoma.
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PMID:Primary large cell lymphoma presenting as hilar mass and obstructive jaundice. 946 61

Portal cavernomatosis consists in the substitution of the portal vein by many fine, twisting venules leading to the liver. This phenomenon is produced as a consequence of anterior thrombosis of the portal vein and is associated with chronic pancreatitis, cancer of the pancreas, intraabdominal sepsis and cholelithiasis. The symptomatology may be nul or present as obstructive jaundice or portal hypertension. Diagnosis is made by Doppler echography. The treatment is portal shunt when symptomatology is produced. In patients with cholelithiasis requiring surgery, the shunt is advised prior to biliary surgery since perioperative hemorrhage, if present, may be incoercible as in the case herein described. We present a 84-year-old woman with portal cavernomatosis the etiology of which was a hydatidic cyst located in the hepatic bifurcation and treated with mebendazol 10 years previously. This etiology has not been previously reported.
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PMID:[Hydatid cyst in the hepatic hilum causing a cavernous transformation in the portal vein]. 964 76

ERCP and sphincterotomy (EPT) are well accepted as the procedure of choice for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes of extrahepatic biliary obstructions. In case of obstructive jaundice and biliary sepsis urgent sphincterotomy is the method of choice, also during acute pancreatitis. The question has been debated whether endoscopic sphincterotomy improves the prognosis of acute (e.g. biliary) pancreatitis itself. With regard to biliary problems different causes of pancreatitis should be distinguished: If the cause of pancreatitis is not obstructive like biliary pancreatitis but metabolic or toxic like alcoholic pancreatitis, no sphincterotomy is indicated. With regard to biliary pancreatitis three prospective randomised trials have been published. All agree to an urgent endoscopic treatment of biliary complications like obstructive jaundice or biliary sepsis during acute pancreatitis. Two of these studies did not find any benefit of interventional endoscopy concerning local or systemic complications of pancreatitis but observed a benefit concerning biliary complications. In one study including patients with biliary problems the complication rate but not mortality rate has been diminished by endoscopy in a subgroup of patients. It is concluded that urgency of ERCP in patients with acute pancreatitis depends on biliary symptoms. Sphincterotomy cannot be generally recommended for acute pancreatitis but only for biliary complications.
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PMID:Endoscopic sphincterotomy for acute pancreatitis: arguments against. 983 18

The standard treatment of acute pancreatitis is primarily supportive, including a well standardized conservative therapy and additionally specific interventions in complicated disease. The role of early endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography in acute pancreatitis has been discussed for about 20 years. The etiology of pancreatitis plays an important role in making the decision for early interventional treatment. The results of clinical trials about early interventional treatment of acute biliary pancreatitis demonstrate that the outcome of patients without signs of biliary stone impaction or acute cholangitis is burdened by more severe complications than in patients treated conservatively. Urgent endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography, endoscopic sphincterotomy and stone extraction within 72 hours of admission reduces the frequency of major complications only in patients with acute biliary pancreatitis with obstructive jaundice or biliary sepsis.
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PMID:[How to proceed? ERCP in acute pancreatitis?]. 1006 2

Results of clinical study of 87 biliary sepsis patients and experimental study on 54 rats with obstructive jaundice and cholangitis are presented. Own and literary data are compared. Specific immune and portal haemodynamic changes, provoced by obstructive jaundice are main pathogenic factors defining specific course of biliary sepsis. These changes are: 1) gut bacterial and endotoxin translocation, portal endotoxaemia; 2) reduction of RES and Kupfer cell function and endotoxin break into the systemic circulation; 3) liver parenchyma ischemia and milliary abscess formation; 4) portal blood flow shunting into the general circulation additionally increasing systemic endotoxaemia. These factors determine rapid, even fulminate development of milliary abscesses of the liver and multiorganic failure. The authors suggest that etiologic and pathogenic factors, causing peculiarities of the clinical course should be indicated in the diagnosis of septic patient.
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PMID:[Biliary sepsis: some peculiarities of pathogenesis]. 1054 May 49

Thirty-two consecutive patients with adenocarcinoma of the ampulla of Vater who had curative resection by pancreaticoduodenectomy were analyzed to determine the accuracy of preoperative investigations and factors that influenced survival. Obstructive jaundice was present in 31 patients, and most patients had pain and weight loss. Ultrasound was more useful than CT in identifying biliary obstruction, whereas CT was more accurate in demonstrating pancreatic duct dilatation and an ampullary mass. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography with biopsy and brush cytology was the most accurate investigation and proved or was suspicious of carcinoma in all patients. Nineteen patients had postoperative complications, three of whom died (9.4%)-two of sepsis and one from aspiration following hematemesis. Actuarial 5-year survival was 46 per cent. Stage of disease was the strongest predictor of survival. All patients with T1 lesions are alive more than 5 years after resection. Patients with lymph node metastases had a significantly shorter survival than node-negative patients (P = 0.00087). Pancreaticoduodenectomy is advocated for ampullary carcinoma in good-risk patients, with the anticipation of prolonged survival in those with early (T1) lesions and node-negative disease.
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PMID:Pancreaticoduodenectomy of ampullary carcinoma. 1055 54

The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of endogenous somatostatin hormone on bacterial translocation in obstructive jaundiced rats. Five groups of rats were studied: group I (n = 10), non-operated group (control); group II (n = 10), sham-operated group which underwent laparotomy and dissection of portal elements, while the common bile duct was not ligated and somatostatin was not injected; group III (n = 10), same as group II, plus injection of somatostatin; group IV (n = 10), common bile duct was ligated with laparotomy but somatostatin was not injected; group V (n = 10), same as group IV, plus somatostatin injection. The blood was analyzed for somatostatin, alkaline phosphatase, and bilirubin levels on the third and tenth days in all animals. At study termination (tenth day), peritoneal swab and blood cultures were taken, and liver, spleen, lung, and mesenteric lymph nodes were harvested for microbiological studies. Bacterial translocation levels were higher in groups III, IV, and V when compared with levels in groups I and II. Similar translocation levels were obtained when blood somatostatin levels were comparable. However, the highest translocation rate was found in groups IV and V in which the blood somatostatin level was also higher when compared with that in other groups. This finding shows that blood somatostatin level is increased in obstructive jaundice. This may explain the bacterial translocation and related sepsis found in obstructive jaundice.
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PMID:Somatostatin: possible cause of bacterial translocation in obstructive jaundiced rats. 1066 91

Acute renal failure (ARF) associated with liver disease is a commonly encountered clinical problem of varied etiology and high mortality. We have prospectively analyzed patients with liver disease and ARF to determine the etiology, clinical spectrum, prognosis and factors affecting the outcome. Other than hepatorenal syndrome patients, out of 221 cases, 66 developed ARF secondary to various liver disease like cirrhosis (n = 29, mortality 8, risk factors-older age p < 0.01, grade III/IV encephalopathy p < 0.05), fulminant hepatic failure (n = 25, mortality 15, risk factor-prolonged prothrombin time p < 0.01), and obstructive jaundice (n = 12, mortality 7, risk factor-sepsis p < 0.01). In these three groups the factors leading to ARF were volume depletion (24), gastrointestinal bleed (28), sepsis (34), drugs (27) [aminoglycosides (9) and NSAID (18)] along with hyperbilirubinemia. Various types of ARF with contemporaneous liver injury were malaria (n = 37, mortality 15, risk factors-higher bilirubin p < 0.001, higher creatinine p < 0.05, anuria p < 0.05 and dialysis dependency p < 0.05), sepsis (n = 36, mortality 22, risk factors-age p < 0.001, higher bilirubin p < 0.01, oliguria p < 0.05), hypovolemia with ischemic hepatic injury (n = 14, mortality 5, risk factors-higher creatinine p < 0.05 and SGPT p < 0.01), acute pancreatitis (n = 12, mortality 4, risk factors-higher bilirubin p < 0.001, higher SGPT p < 0.01, dialysis dependency p < 0.05), rifampicin toxicity (n = 10, no mortality), paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (n = 3, no mortality), CuSO4 poisoning (n = 3 mortality 2), post abortal (n = 11, mortality 6, risk factors higher creatinine p < 0.05 and SGPT p < 0.01), ARF following delivery including HELLP syndrome (n = 12, mortality 4, risk factors-higher bilirubin p < 0.01 and SGPT p < 0.01), and of uncertain etiology (n= 14 mortality 4). 133 patients (60.2%), required hemodialysis hemodialfiltration or peritoneal dialysis. ARF associated with liver disease is having high mortality (42.5%). Avoidance of dehydration, hypotension, nephrotoxic drugs and sepsis, with promote dialytic support are necessary to reduce mortality and morbidity.
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PMID:Acute renal failure associated with liver disease in India: etiology and outcome. 1104 Dec 94

The long-term survival rate of patients with carcinoma of the pancreas is low. Even more so, long-term survival of patients with metastatic pancreatic carcinoma is extremely rare. In this case report, we describe a patient with an unusual course of disease. This patient was diagnosed with locoregional carcinoma of the pancreas and therefore underwent gastroenterostomy and cholecystojeojenostomy without resection of the primary tumor. Later he was treated with radiotherapy and chemotherapy and survived 12 years, during 11 of which he had no evidence of disease. He died 12 years after the initial diagnosis from peritoneal dissemination of poorly differentiated carcinoma complicated with obstructive jaundice and sepsis. To our knowledge, this patient had the longest reported survival with locally advanced pancreas carcinoma that was not resected. The case is presented and discussed in this article.
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PMID:Twelve-year survival after the diagnosis of locally advanced carcinoma of the pancreas: A case report. 1106 96


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