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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have previously described (Medicine 56:493, 1977) 12 patients with diffuse lupus glomerulonephritis who had no clinical or laboratory evidence of renal involvement at the time of the initial biopsy. In this article we report the course of 10 of these patients followed for 5-11 yr (mean 83 mo). One patient died in renal failure and two others of related causes (
septicemia
and subarachnoid hemorrhage). Seven patients (Group I) had a benign course from a renal standpoint, with stable renal function and mild or no urinary abnormalities. Repeat biopsy in four patients in this group revealed near complete resolution of the original lesion in two and considerable improvement in two others, who now have primarily mesangial hypercellularity and a focal lesion, respectively. Renal function deteriorated in three patients (Group II), resulting in loss of congruent to 50% of GFR in two and renal death in the third. Repeat biopsy in one of these patients showed a more severe, albeit focal, glomerulonephritis. Prognosis for renal function appears better in patients with silent
nephropathy
, but larger numbers are required to substantiate this impression. Until definitive answers become available, we believe it prudent to biopsy SLE patients even in the absence of overt renal involvement and to treat those with diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis.
...
PMID:Silent diffuse lupus nephritis: long-term follow-up. 704 6
The available data were examined from 43 patients with spinal cord injuries and end-stage
renal disease
undergoing dialysis. All but one patient had a chronic urinary tract infection, which was characterized by persistence of the same organisms for prolonged periods, high prevalence of mixed infections, scarcity of symptoms, lack of fever of leukocytosis, and a considerable prevalence of cross-infection with the decubitus ulcers. Staphylococcus aureus and various Gram-negative organisms were responsible for most of the vascular access infections in our patients. Decubitus ulcers were common and were frequently infected. Cross-contamination between infected decubitus ulcers, the urinary tract, and vascular access seemed to have occurred on several occasions. The recorded respiratory infections were preponderantly caused by Gram-negative organisms. Urinary tract, vascular access, and decubitus infections seemed to be the source of
septicemia
in most of the recorded instances.
Septicemia
was the immediate cause of death in half of the patients.
...
PMID:Bacterial infections in patients with chronic renal failure: occurrence with spinal cord injury. 709 42
Accepted causes (acute insults) and risk factors for the development of acute renal failure were defined, quantitatively assessed, and tested for statistical significance in 143 patients with acute tubular necrosis. Sixty-two percent of patients had more than one acute insult, and 48 percent had more than one suspected risk factor. Hypotension, excessive aminoglycoside exposure, pigmenturia, and dehydration were identified as highly significant acute insults, while it was concluded that
sepsis
and administration of radiocontrast material could not be incriminated as causes of acute tubular necrosis. An additive interaction between acute insults was demonstrated, and the severity of acute renal failure was related to the number and severity of acute insults. Patients with oliguric renal failure had more severe acute insults than patients with nonoliguric renal failure. Preexisting
renal disease
and chronic hypertension were significant risk factors, the latter only when hypotension had been one of the acute insults. An age of more than 59 years, gout and/or chronic hyperuricemia, diabetes, and long-term diuretic administration were not found to be significant risk factors.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure. Multivariate analysis of causes and risk factors. 711 78
Six hundred nine private patients with systemic lupus erythematosus were followed up for a mean of ten years. Ninety percent were female; 79% were white. Three hundred sixty-nine received diagnosis before 1970, and 234 after. Three hundred seventy-nine did not have nephritis; 230 did. The overall ten-year survival was 79% (87% without nephritis, 65% with nephritis). Male patients did consistently worse than female patients. No overall white vs nonwhite difference was noted. The presence of nephrotic syndrome at the onset of nephritis was a poor prognostic sign, but its development later was not. Patients younger than 16 years without nephritis have an excellent prognosis. One hundred twenty-eight patients died (82 with nephritis, 46 without nephritis). The most common causes of death were
renal disease
and
sepsis
. Improved survival of this series may reflect closer follow-up, better nutritional status, and treatment at earlier stages of disease.
...
PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus--survival patterns. Experience with 609 patients. 746 97
Trauma and non-traumatic insults can cause muscle damage to such an extent that serious sequelae to other organs may result. Myoglobinuria and subsequent acute renal failure (ARF) is a well known and widely studied fact of such sequelae. Twelve cases of ARF (between 1990-1993) who have developed renal dysfunction after prolonged muscular exercise e.g., squat jumping, sit-ups and blunt trauma from sticks or leather belts mainly given by law enforcing personnel for certain issues were studied. None of them had previous history of myopathy, neuropathy or
renal disease
. All were critically ill on presentation and required renal support in the form of dialysis. Although morbidity was high in all, eleven of them recovered and one expired due to
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Acute renal failure due to traumatic rhabdomyolysis. 759 12
Sixty-four insulin-dependent (Type 1) diabetic patients (IDDM) in Soweto, South Africa were followed over a 10-year period. Patients were assessed in 1982 and again in 1992. There were 10 deaths (16%), half of which were due to renal failure. Ketoacidosis, hypoglycaemia, and
sepsis
accounted for the rest. At the 10-year follow-up mean age (+/- SD) was 32.4 +/- 5.0 years and diabetes duration 13.6 +/- 2.6 years. Retinopathy affected 52%, peripheral neuropathy 42%, and
nephropathy
28% (all significantly increased from the 1982 assessment). Microalbuminuria and autonomic neuropathy were also common. Serum cholesterol was over 6.5 mmol l-1 in 19%, hypertension affected 22%, and 28% were cigarette smokers; though no patient had evidence of macroangiopathy. We conclude that IDDM in South Africa is associated with excess mortality, a significant proportion of which is related to
nephropathy
. Diabetes of long duration is now not uncommon in South Africa, and although diabetic complications frequently occur, most patients have good life quality and freedom from large vessel disease.
...
PMID:Mortality and outcome of insulin-dependent diabetes in Soweto, South Africa. 764 31
Sixteen dogs with splenic infarction due to causes other than splenic torsion were identified. Dogs with splenic infarction often had multiple concurrent diseases, and surgical management of splenic infarction was associated with high mortality. Splenic infarction occurred in dogs with hypercoagulable conditions associated with liver disease,
renal disease
, and hyperadrenocorticism, or as a consequence of uniform splenomegaly, neoplasia, or thrombosis associated with cardiovascular disease. Clinical signs and common laboratory findings generally reflected the underlying disease process. A variety of splenic abnormalities were detected by abdominal ultrasound in 15 dogs, with the ventral extremity of the spleen being most often abnormal. Four dogs were euthanized or died because of the presence of severe systemic disease, whereas 12 dogs underwent laparotomy. Complete splenectomy was performed in 9 dogs and partial splenectomy was performed in 2 dogs. Seven dogs died in the immediate postoperative period, 3 required chronic veterinary care, and 2 had uncomplicated long-term recoveries. Splenic infaraction should be regarded as a sign of altered blood flow and coagulation, rather than as a primary disease, and surgical management should be reserved for patients with life-threatening complications such as hemoabdomen or
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Splenic infarction in 16 dogs: a retrospective study. 767 15
There is a high incidence of chronic liver disease in end-stage renal failure patients on dialysis. Hepatitis C virus appears responsible for 80% of posttransfusion hepatitis, and up to 80% of sporadic hepatitis and cryptogenic cirrhosis. Anti-HCV antibodies correlate highly with the presence of active infection. The clinical implications of HCV infection in patients undergoing renal transplantation is unknown. Part I: We undertook a descriptive cross-sectional study of all renal failure patients admitted for kidney transplant between 1/84 and 12/88. Pretransplant sera were assayed for anti-HCV using an ELISA. Patients were divided into anti-HCV-positive (study group) and anti-HCV-negative (controls). Part II: A cohort study was performed with both groups followed from the time of transplantation to the present. Comparisons were made by t tests, chi-square analysis with Yates correction, Mann Whitney test for nonparametric results and multiple regression analysis. Part I: Anti-HCV was present in 76 of 716 sera assayed. There were no differences in sex, age, number of previous transplants, and underlying
renal disease
. Four variables predicted the presence of anti-HCV: number of blood transfusions; duration on dialysis; i.v. drug abuse, and nonwhite race. Part II: A group of 596 patients was further analyzed. The mean duration of follow-up was not different between the two groups. There were no differences in graft survival, overall mortality, or mortality secondary to liver disease or
sepsis
. Based on these results, the presence of anti-HCV should not be a contraindication for kidney transplantation.
...
PMID:Hepatitis C--its prevalence in end-stage renal failure patients and clinical course after kidney transplantation. 767 27
A 25-year-old Hispanic female with insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and endstage
renal disease
on chronic hemodialysis was hospitalized with paroxysms of fever and chills for a day. A day after starting piperacillin for presumed intravascular line infection, she developed a maculopapular dermatitis and abnormal liver function tests, at which point the drug was discontinued. However, the rash persisted for 10 days, after which it progressively worsened. She continued to have high fevers, abnormal liver function tests, and marked leukocytosis, despite multiple negative cultures and other nondiagnostic examinations. She was treated as a patient with
sepsis
of unknown etiology and received multiple antibiotics on an empiric basis without response. A diagnosis of Stevens-Johnson syndrome was then made based on the triad of cutaneous dermatitis, mucosal, and hepatic involvement. She received high dose corticosteroids and her fever, dermatitis, mucosal lesions, leukocytosis, and abnormal liver function tests improved dramatically.
...
PMID:Stevens-Johnson syndrome presenting as intravenous line sepsis. 779 65
Among a spectrum of renal disorders encountered in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the lesion studied most often has been the glomerular disease known as HIV-associated
nephropathy
. Of the other coincidental renal perturbations reported, the most significant are a heterogenous group encompassing potentially reversible acute renal failure (ARF), primarily acute tubular necrosis. While HIV-associated
nephropathy
may frequently be seen in asymptomatic HIV-seropositive individuals, acute tubular necrosis almost always is encountered in patients with clinical acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). We analyzed our decade's experience in the management of 146 HIV disease patients with ARF (132 AIDS patients and 14 HIV-seropositive patients) and compared it with a contemporaneous group of 306 non-HIV subjects with ARF. All patients evaluated for ARF between January 1984 and December 1993 by the Renal Division at Kings County Hospital Center, Brooklyn, NY, were reviewed. Only those patients with ARF who reached a serum creatinine concentration of 530 mumol/L or higher were included in the analysis. Ninety-one percent of 146 HIV disease patients with ARF were less than 50 years old compared with only 33% of the 306 non-HIV subjects (P < 0.001).
Septicemia
was directly or indirectly responsible for 75% of patients with ARF in the AIDS group and for 39% in the non-HIV subjects (P < 0.006). Urinary tract obstruction was the cause of ARF in 54 of 306 (17%) non-HIV patients compared with none in the HIV group (P < 0.00001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Outcome of severe acute renal failure in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 787 16
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