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

Personal experience of 31 patients suffering from intractable ascites due to advanced liver cirrhosis between 1978 and 1987 is reported. Seventeen patients were selected for a peritoneojugular shunt: in 3 patients the Le Veen shunt was performed and in 14 the Denver shunt was preferred. The high postoperative morbidity and mortality due to liver failure, DIC, hepatorenal syndrome, bleeding, sepsis and cerebral thrombosis is pointed out. Careful selection of patients to be submitted to this surgical procedure is essential because of the high morbidity due to ascites reinfusion. DIC has to be diagnosed as soon as possible and, when severe, the prompt interruption of the peritoneojugular shunt is mandatory.
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PMID:[The Denver peritoneojugular shunt. Current indications]. 272 37

Over a 9-year period, major resection was successfully performed on 51 occasions with total vascular exclusion using supra- and infrahepatic caval and portal vein clamping. The main indications for hepatic resection were centrally located tumor in liver metastases (62%) and hepatocellular carcinoma with no evidence of co-existing cirrhosis (25%). Major resections included extended and regular right hepatectomy, extended left hepatectomy, and segmentectomy. The mean duration of vascular exclusion was 46.5 +/- 5.0 minutes (range 20 to 70 minutes) and mean blood transfusion requirement was 1.4 +/- 0.4 units during vascular exclusion. There were significant correlations between postoperative fall in factor II levels and the number of segments removed (r = 0.37, p = 0.015) and between serum alanine aminotransferase levels at day 2 and the duration of vascular exclusion (r = 0.35, p = 0.02). One patient died 45 days after the procedure of multi-organ failure and sepsis. Nonfatal complications occurred in 7 patients (14%) and included respiratory infection (7 patients), biliary fistula (3 patients), and collection at the site of hepatic resection (3 patients). Total vascular exclusion is a safe and useful technique in resection of major hepatic lesions that involve hepatic veins.
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PMID:Major hepatic resection under total vascular exclusion. 274 11

To examine the impact of the AIDS epidemic on morbidity and mortality in a defined population of intravenous drug users, we analyzed overall and cause-specific death rates, AIDS incidence, and acute medical hospitalizations among patients in a long-term methadone maintenance program in New York City for the years 1984 through 1987 (midyear population for each year 828 to 891; demographic characteristics did not differ). The number of deaths while in treatment increased from 11 (13.3/1000) in 1984 to 39 (44.2/1000) in 1987. Deaths from AIDS increased from 3.6/1000 to 14.7/1000, deaths due to bacterial pneumonia/sepsis from 3.6/1000 to 13.6/1000; deaths from cirrhosis, drug overdose, trauma, and other causes remained relatively stable. AIDS incidence rose from six cases/1000 in 1984 to 20.4.1000 in 1987. Hospitalizations for AIDS, pneumonia, tuberculosis, and endocarditis/sepsis increased from 84.9/1000 in 1986 to 144.8/1000 in 1987. These data suggest that the AIDS epidemic has had a profound effect on patterns of morbidity and mortality among intravenous drug users in this methadone program population. Drug treatment programs may be important sites for targeting clinical services for drug users with AIDS, although the increasing burden of AIDS-related disease will require expansion of existing funding and treatment resources.
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PMID:Impact of the AIDS epidemic on morbidity and mortality among intravenous drug users in a New York City methadone maintenance program. 278 2

Eighteen partial splenic embolization procedures (PSEs) were performed in 17 children for hypersplenism (13) and/or esophageal variceal hemorrhage (12). The underlying disease was biliary atresia (BA) in nine children, portal vein thrombosis (PVT) in four, and biliary cirrhosis (BC) in four. From 20% to 90% of the spleen was embolized. Immediate morbidity was high, albeit minor, and the initial hospitalization was protracted for an average of 16 days. The children were followed from 4 to 81 months (average, 34.2). Four patients with BA patients subsequently had liver transplantation at an average of 20 months after PSE. In ten of 13 patients with hypersplenism, hematologic indexes returned to and remained normal throughout follow-up. The three exceptional patients (who had only 20%, 60% and 60% splenic embolization) developed recurrent mild hypersplenism, one of whom was reembolized and is free from hypersplenism 22 months later. Variceal hemorrhage was ameliorated in all 12 patients (average, 2.4 episodes of hemorrhage per year before PSE, 0.5 per year afterwards). Overwhelming postsplenectomy sepsis did not occur in an aggregate follow-up of 48.5 years. PSE is a legitimate treatment alternative for hypersplenism and for esophageal varices in children.
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PMID:Splenic embolization in children: long-term efficacy. 278 59

Of 154 elective hepatectomies performed during the 13 year period from 1973 to 1985 for hepatocellular carcinoma, 27 (17.5 percent) were performed on patients 65 years of age or older. Among these elderly patients, 40.7 percent died in the hospital compared with 21.3 percent of the younger patients (p less than 0.05). Sepsis accounted for 72.7 percent of the hospital deaths among the elderly patients, in contrast to 25.9 percent among the younger patients. The overall incidence of hospital death due to sepsis was significantly higher in the elderly patients (p less than 0.001). Hepatic lobectomy or segmentectomy in the elderly patients with cirrhosis was followed by hospital death in 88.9 percent compared with 25 percent of the elderly patients without cirrhosis (p less than 0.01). A higher incidence of hospital death occurred among the elderly in Okuda's stage I (p less than 0.05), Child's class A (p less than 0.02), and in those with concomitant systemic disorders (p less than 0.05). We conclude that in patients 65 years of age or older with hepatocellular carcinoma, concomitant systemic disorders play a role in determining the outcome of hepatectomy. Elderly patients with cirrhosis are high-risk candidates for major hepatectomy for whom limited hepatic resection should be considered.
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PMID:Hepatic resection for hepatocellular carcinoma in elderly patients. 282 39

Between 1977 and 1986, 172 patients with primary hepatic cancer were treated at the Department of Surgery I, University of Vienna Medical School. In 76 cases (80%) males, 20% females), cirrhosis of the liver was also present. Ninety patients underwent curative surgery (hepatic resection in 64, and liver transplantation in 26 cases). There were no early tumor stages. Forty-five large tumors were confined to one lobe, 42 involved both lobes, 3 even invaded adjacent structures, the majority (74%) being hepatocellular carcinomas. Forty-four of the 64 liver resections were performed in patients with otherwise normal livers (mortality 18%), while 20 patients had associated liver cirrhosis. In view of the extremely high mortality rates after extended liver resection, only limited local resections have been performed in cirrhotic malignancies since 1982 (mortality 25%). Perioperative mortality (25% overall) was due mainly to hepatic failure and sepsis; non-fatal complications occurred in 12 patients (26%). Seventeen of the 26 liver transplants were cirrhotic hepatomas. Nine deaths (34%) were caused by technical problems (graft failure, clotting disorder after massive transfusion) and systemic infections. The outcome for the patient after the immediate postoperative period was determined by tumor regrowth (residual liver tissue, graft, distant metastases) in both groups (median life expectancy 18.4 months after radical liver resection and 18.6 months after liver transplantation). Surgery is the only alternative for these patients (50% survival of untreated hepatoma: 2.6 months), improving both their quality of life and survival. We believe that in carefully selected candidates with non-resectable tumors liver replacement may be a useful alternative.
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PMID:Primary hepatic cancer--the role of limited resection and total hepatectomy with orthotopic liver replacement. 285 Sep 84

The purpose of this study was to determine the incidence of death as the initial manifestation of cholelithiasis. Records of patients who died or underwent cholecystectomy for gallstone-related disease at Duke University Medical Center between 1976 and 1985 were reviewed. Thirty patients died, six of whom (20%) had previous episodes of biliary pain and stone documentation. Twenty-four (80%) were asymptomatic (three with previous incidental diagnosis of cholelithiasis). Reason for admission included acute cholecystitis (nine), pancreatitis (eight), biliary pain (six), cholangitis (four), jaundice (one), and endocarditis (one). Three patients died of gallstone complications without surgical intervention; one patient had renal failure and two had septicemia. Other causes of death were: sepsis (seven patients), cardiac failure (six), pulmonary complications (four), renal failure (three), cerebrovascular accident (three), liver failure (two), pancreatitis (one), and gastrointestinal bleeding (one). During this period, 1731 cholecystectomies were performed without mortality. In this group, the patients were younger (50 +/- 8 years vs. 64 +/- 13 years, p less than 0.001), and had a lower incidence of cirrhosis (p less than 0.001) and diabetes (p less than 0.002). The sex ratio was inverted (p less than 0.001). This study demonstrates that death from gallstones is uncommon (three cases per year), as is death from their initial clinical manifestation (1.2%). The risk of death is two- and ninefold higher in patients with acute cholecystitis or acute pancreatitis. Age, cirrhosis, and diabetes are important determinants of outcome.
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PMID:Deaths from gallstones. Incidence and associated clinical factors. 291 58

In 6 patients with spontaneous rupture of hepatocellular carcinoma complicating liver cirrhosis, but with no occlusion of the main portal trunk, transcatheter arterial embolization was performed within 7 days of the rupture. All 6 patients were thought to be inoperable because of shock state or severe hepatic dysfunction. In all 6 patients, the progressive decrease in the hematocrit ceased soon after the embolization. Five patients survived for 31-168 days after the embolization; 1 patient who developed septicemia died 10 days later. We conclude that transcatheter arterial embolization is beneficial as a procedure of first choice for ruptured hepatocellular carcinoma when the portal blood flow is maintained.
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PMID:Benefit of transcatheter arterial embolization for ruptured hepatocellular carcinoma complicating liver cirrhosis. 298 72

Eleven acute rejections were found in 9 patients with liver transplantation due to end-stage liver cirrhosis. The rejections were diagnosed with fine-needle aspiration biopsy (FNAB) giving the cellular picture of immunoactivation in the liver graft when compared to a simultaneous sample of peripheral blood. s-Alkaline phosphatase and s-bilirubin increased within 1 week after onset of rejection in 7 and 10 cases, respectively. s-Alanine amino-transferase and b-ammonium were of no value in the diagnosis of acute rejection. A core biopsy was obtained only in a case of severe liver damage, mainly to estimate the need for retransplantation. One year after grafting, 6 out of 7 cirrhotic patients are well, all with normal liver function. Two have died of sepsis. One patient died from pulmonary metastases of occult liver carcinoma 6 months after the transplantation. FNAB seems helpful in detecting early acute rejection and also excluding such an event in the liver graft.
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PMID:Diagnosis of acute rejection in liver transplantation. 304 94

In healthy subjects normal plasmalactoferrin (PLf) concentrations were found to be 0.206 +/- 0.06 mg/l in 49 men and 0.148 +/- 0.06 mg/l in 62 women. A highly significant correlation of PLf with the number of circulating neutrophils (PMN) and a PLf/PMN relationship suggesting proportionality was demonstrated. Among 73 patients absolute PLf concentrations were significantly increased in septicemia, cirrhosis of the liver and tumors with liver metastases, decreased in localized infection, tumors without liver involvement, iron deficiency and acute hepatitis B, and normal in acute myocardial infarction. The PLf/PMN ratio, on the other hand, was normal in liver cirrhosis, hepatitis B and in a part of the patients with septicemia and tumor disease with liver involvement. The ratio was increased in a part of the septicemic patients, and decreased in the remaining disease types. Positive PLf/PMN correlations were found in myocardial infarction, septicemia and liver cirrhosis, whereas a very close, negative correlation existed in acute hepatitis B. These findings are discussed on the basis of existing knowledge on lactoferrin physiology, the intravascular fate of PMN and the RES function.
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PMID:Plasmalactoferrin and the plasmalactoferrin/neutrophil ratio. A reassessment of normal values and of the clinical relevance. 313 91


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