Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

One hundred and one cases of Klebsiella bacteraemia from the National University Hospital, Singapore, were reviewed retrospectively. There were 54 (53.5%) males and 47 (46.5%) females. Mean (+/- SE) age was 54 (+/- 2.4) years. Overall mortality was 26%. Nosocomial infections accounted for 20%. Underlying diabetes mellitus and malignancy were present in 36 and 26% respectively. The source of the bacteraemia was not known in 33% of cases, 17% had liver abscess, 29% had urinary tract infections, 9% had pneumonia, 10% had an abscess separate from the liver, and 3% had biliary sepsis. Elevated alkaline phosphatase (> 100 U-1) was seen in all cases of liver abscess (sensitivity 100%, specificity 27%). Nonsurvivors had a significantly lower platelet count than survivors (104 +/- 25 x 10(9)/l vs. 176 +/- 15 x 10(9)/l, unpaired t-test P < 0.05), and a platelet count of less than 150 x 10(9)/l was associated with a significantly higher mortality (37% vs. 11%, chi 2 P < 0.01). Nosocomial infection was associated with 45% mortality, whereas community-acquired infection had a lower rate of 21%, this was not statistically significant. Seventy-eight per cent of these Klebsiella isolates were sensitive to gentamicin and cotrimoxazole, and 100% to imipenem.
...
PMID:Klebsiella bacteraemia: a report of 101 cases from National University Hospital, Singapore. 796 72

In 10 adult patients with hepatic portal venous gas (HPVG), the clinical significance of HPVG and the efficacy of X-ray computed tomography (CT) were evaluated. HPVG was associated with ischemic bowel disease (n = 3), trauma (n = 4), liver abscess (n = 1), sepsis (n = 1), and unknown etiology (n = 1). The diagnostic ability of CT for the detection of HPVG was far superior to that of plain abdominal radiograph. Of 9 patients who underwent CT, HPVG located in the left hepatic lobe in all patients, and also in right hepatic lobe in 7 patients. Gas could be recognized in the left lobe and the anterior segment of the right lobe more clearly than in the posterior segment of the right lobe because of its larger amount of intravenous collection. The mortality rate of our cases was 100%. Gas was demonstrated simultaneously in the portal vein radicles and hepatic veins on CT in 4 patients with no clinical evidence of sepsis, which suggested the possibility of intraparenchymal shift of gas from the portal vein into the hepatic vein. In a single case with sepsis, gas was noted in various vessels, including arteries, in addition to the portal venous system. The authors conclude that HPVG is still a grave sign in Japan and prompt appropriate treatment is required. CT may be of great value in the early detection of HPVG and may indicate its etiology.
...
PMID:[Imaging and clinical significance of hepatic portal venous gas seen in adult patients]. 808 16

A previously healthy 27-year-old man developed Fusobacterium necrophorum septicemia complicated by a solitary liver abscess. This is an unusual course of necrobacillosis, in addition to Fusobacterium necrophorum being a rare cause of anaerobic liver abscesses. The patient was treated with percutaneous drainage and a prolonged course of ampicillin and metronidazole therapy. He had a successful recovery.
...
PMID:Fusobacterium necrophorum septicemia complicated by liver abscess. A case report. 811 Apr 45

A patient with hepatocellular carcinoma, associated segmental portal vein thrombosis, and accompanying pneumobilia, developed a liver abscess and sepsis following transcatheter chemoembolization (TCE). It was believed that the combination of bile duct necrosis after arterial occlusion and pneumobilia led to ascending enteric infection and seeding of the necrotic tumor, which ultimately led to fatal outcome. We conclude that TCE is contraindicated in such cases.
...
PMID:Fatal septic complication of transcatheter chemoembolization for hepatocellular carcinoma. 826 33

A number of different organisms can be isolated from intraabdominal infection. The most common are aerobic Gram-negative bacilli. Anaerobes are not unusual. From June 1989 to January 1990, Cefmetazole was administered to 23 patients with intraabdominal infection at Veterans General Hospital-Taipei. There were six patients with spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, five biliary tract infection, five liver abscesses, five with pelvic inflammatory disease, one acute ruptured appendicitis and another intraabdominal abscess. In addition, ten patients had sepsis. Clinical response was satisfactory in 21 (91.3%) of 23 patients, and the microbiological eradication rate was 90% (36/40). One patient with Streptococcus and Bacteroides oralis liver abscess relapsed after organism eradication. Therapy failed in a case with Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Bacteroides fragilis infection. This study showed Cefmetazole to be an effective and safe antibiotic for treatment of intraabdominal infection.
...
PMID:[Clinical efficacy of cefmetazole in intraabdominal infection]. 828 91

Thirteen orthotopic liver transplantations were performed in 12 patients for hepatic complications of Wilson's disease between May 1988 and July 1992. Ten patients had fulminant hepatic failure and two chronic liver disease. One patient underwent retransplantation for liver abscess secondary to hepatic artery thrombosis. Nine patients survive at a median follow-up of 18 (range 6-31) months. Three patients have died: two from multiple organ failure and sepsis, one from B cell lymphoma. Postoperative complications included bleeding requiring laparotomy in two patients, renal impairment in five, bacterial septicaemia in three, fungal sepsis in two and acute cellular rejection in six. The nine surviving patients are well with normal liver function test results.
...
PMID:Orthotopic liver transplantation for hepatic complications of Wilson's disease. 836 35

A 54-year-old female was admitted to our hospital because of a spiking fever, right hypochondriac pain, right orbital pain and visual disturbance. Before admission she was treated with systemic antibiotics infusion for a diagnosis of liver abscess at the other hospital and the liver abscess almost diminished for a while. With the diagnosis of liver abscess and endophthalmitis, liver drainage and evisceration were carried out. The culture of pus from the eye and liver yielded K. pneumoniae. After liver drainage, evisceration, and direct injection of antibiotics into the eye, inflammatory findings tended to improve. Seven cases of metastatic K. pneumoniae endophthalmitis have been reported so far in Japan. The cases had liver abscess as the primary disease and 3 cases had bilateral endophthalmitis. Five cases with liver abscess survived except one who died of sepsis, but unfortunately, all cases became blind in the affected eyes. The prognosis of bacterial endophthalmitis, especially associated with K. pneumoniae liver abscess, is poor and as the outcome could appear to depend on time when treatment is started, a more aggressive diagnostic approach is required. Moreover systemic antibiotic infusion alone is inadequate for treatment of liver abscess and endophthalmitis, and liver drainage, evisceration and intravitreal injection of antibiotics must be given in early stage.
...
PMID:[A case of liver abscess associated with endophthalmitis caused by Klebsiella pneumoniae]. 845 Feb 78

A prospective epidemiologic survey of bacterial infections in chronic hemodialysis patients was conducted from September 1, 1989 to February 28, 1990 in 27 dialysis units. Of the 1,455 patients enrolled in the study, 55 presented 63 episodes of bacteremia (incidence of 0.7 bacteremia per 100 patient-months). The portal of entry of sepsis was the vascular access in 50.8% of the episodes. The causative microorganisms were most often gram-positive cocci (69.8%). 23% of the teremic patients had a serum ferritin > 1,000 micrograms/l versus 7% of the nonbacteremic infected patients (p = 0.005). 39.7% of the patients had undergone a surgical operation during the month preceding the bacteremia. Eight patients had a recurrence during the study period and 8 had a metastatic localization: spondylodiscitis 2, septic pulmonary embolus 2, endocarditis 1, arthritis 1, liver abscess 1 and endophthalmia 1. 66% of the episodes required a hospitalization that lasted an average of 20 days. Mortality rate was 6.3%. This prospective study showed a trend towards a reduction in incidence and mortality of bacteremia in patients on chronic hemodialysis.
...
PMID:Bacteremia in patients on chronic hemodialysis. A multicenter prospective survey. 850 43

A rare case of pyogenic hepatic abscess that ruptured into the pericardial cavity is reported. A 50-year-old female who had been admitted for cholangitis associated with bi-lateral stricture of bile duct and intrahepatic stones, presented a pyogenic hepatic abscess in the left lobe on an abdominal computed tomography (CT). Percutaneous transhepatic abscess drainage (PTAD) was performed. But during PTAD-graphy five days later, cardiac tamponade developed secondarily to rapid accumulation of contrast medium in the pericardial cavity flowing from liver abscess. An emergency subxiphoid pericardectomy was performed and she made a good recovery. Unfortunately seven months later, she died of septicemia caused by a newly developed abscess in the right lobe of the liver.
...
PMID:[An unusual case of pyogenic hepatic abscess rupturing into the pericardial cavity]. 895 26

Nineteen patients with hepatocellular carcinoma associated with hepatolithiasis were retrospectively analyzed. Eleven of the 19 patients presented with hepatolithiasis-related biliary infection. Diagnosis was erroneously assumed to be hepatolithiasis alone, liver abscess, or cholangiocarcinoma in five of 11 patients before surgery was attempted. Middle-age, male sex, liver cirrhosis, hepatitis B or C infection, abnormal alpha-fetoprotein, and negative carcinoembryonic antigen raised the suspicion of associated hepatocellular carcinoma rather than cholangiocarcinoma in patients with hepatolithiasis. Antibiotics and nonoperative methods to resolve biliary infection first, followed by hepatectomy, in selected cases, to eradicate hepatocellular carcinoma and hepatolithiasis simultaneously provides the best chance for long-term survival. Otherwise, patients often died of hepatolithiasis-related biliary sepsis rather than hepatocellular carcinoma per se in the long run.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma complicated with coexisting hepatolithiasis: pitfalls in diagnosis and management. 982 39


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>