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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kappaB) transcription factor plays a key role in the induction of pro-inflammatory gene expression, leading to the synthesis of cytokines, adhesion molecules, chemokines, growth factors and enzymes. Results of studies in in vitro and in vivo models of inflammation and malignancy have also suggested central roles for NF-kappaB in programmed cell death, or apoptosis. NF-kappaB plays a central role in a variety of acute and chronic inflammatory diseases. In the common lung diseases associated with a significant inflammatory component such as severe
sepsis
, acute lung injury, acute respiratory distress syndrome, cystic fibrosis and asthma, the pathogenic roles of NF-kappaB have been extensively investigated. In
COPD
, activation of NF-kappaB has been implicated in disease pathogenesis but its exact role is less clearly demonstrable in this heterogeneous patient population. However, the principal risk factor for
COPD
, cigarette smoking, is strongly associated with NF-kappaB activation. Activation of NF-kappaB has been demonstrated in mineral dust diseases and probably plays a role in the pathogenesis of these chronic illnesses. NF-kB also plays a variety of roles in lung cancer including resistance to chemotherapy, inhibition of tumorigenesis and inducing expression of antiapoptotic genes. The complex NF-kappaB pathway offers a variety of potential molecular targets for chemotherapeutic intervention. A variety of agents aimed at modulating NF-kappaB activity are in various stages of investigation.
...
PMID:The role of nuclear factor kappa B in the pathogenesis of pulmonary diseases: implications for therapy. 1472 3
For a long time fibrinopeptide A(FPA), fibrinopeptide B(FPB), D-dimer, FM test, serum FDP, and thrombin anti-thrombin complex(TAT) are being used as molecular markers to for sure diagnose hypercoagulable state and thrombus formation. Indeed these molecular markers are very useful for diagnosing thrombus formation, disseminated intravascular coagulation(DIC), and the indicator of treatment of DIC. But these molecular parameters are not enough and difficult for prognosis of the disease or predicting the complication of patients as the most important subject for clinicians. The soluble fibrin monomer-fibrinogen complex (SF) is a complex coupling fibrin monomer and fibrinogen molecules to be formed in the early-activated state of blood coagulation. Thus such a molecular complex is expected to serve as a parameter for the diagnosis of thrombus formation and DIC, in particular its early stage. The aim of the present study is to evaluate a potential usefulness of a newly developed SF test utilizing an SF specific monoclonal antibody (IF-43). We measured SF together with established other parameters in 195 patients with DIC, subclinical DIC/hypercoagulable state, and non-DIC. The diagnosis of DIC was made based on a modified version of the criteria established by the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare of Japan. Underlying disease includes leukemia, malignant lymphoma, myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), multiple injury, giant ovarian tumor, prostatic cancer with multiple bone metastasis, lung cancer, breast cancer with multiple lung and bone metastasis, severe pneumoniae,
sepsis
, hemophagocytic syndrome (HPS), and rheumatoid arthritis. The SF levels in DIC patients were significantly higher than those in the subclinical DIC/hypercoagulable state, and the non-DIC patients. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis shows that the specificity and sensitivity of the SF assay appears to be satisfactory. As the level of SF reflects the thrombin generation activity in plasma, it would serve as a strong tool to selectively kick up the state of thrombin generation. These results indicate that the SF could be a specific and reliable parameter for the diagnosis of DIC and contribute to legitimate managements of patients with DIC. The excessive life response to serious clinical insults, such as
sepsis
, severe pancreatitis, trauma and shock, is called systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS). Once SIRS occurs, people may often die from serious complications such as adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), acute lung injury (ALI), disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) and multiple organ failure (MOF). Especially, ALI followed by pneumoniae associated with SIRS could depend on patient's prognosis and life. That is to say, it seems to be urgent for clinicians to make differential diagnosis between Pneumoniae associated with SIRS and Coagulopathy (PASC) and Simple Pneumoniae (SP). Soluble fibrin monomer-fibrinogen complex(SF) is formed in the early-activated state of blood coagulation. Thus such a molecular complex is expected to serve as a parameter for the diagnosis of coagulopathy, in particular its early stage. The aim of the present study is to make differential diagnosis between Pneumoniae associated with SIRS and Coagulopathy (PASC) and Simple Pneumoniae(SP) by using a newly developed SF test utilizing an SF specific monoclonal antibody (IF-43). We measured SF together with established other parameters, hemogram, blood laboratory items in 7 patients with PASC and 17 patients with SP. The diagnosis of Pneumoniae was defined according to the criteria: clinical symptoms abnormal shadow in both Chest X-p and Chest CT, increased level of CRP, number of WBC. The diagnosis of SIRS was based on the criteria established by American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP)/Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) Consensus Conference held in August of 1991 in Northbrook, IL (USA). Underlying disease includes leukemias, malignant lymphoma, myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), multiple myeloma, idiopathic thrombocytopenia purpura(ITP), multiple injury (bone fracture), cerebral hemorrhage, enterocolitis, Appendicitis, lung cancer, larynx cancer, bronchiolitis obliterans organizing pneumonia(BOOP),
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(COPD),
sepsis
. The SF levels in PASC patients are significantly higher than those in SP patients (p < 0.001). Otherwise, there is no significant difference of the CRP levels between in PASC group and SP group (p < ns). There is no co-relationship between SF level and D-dimer level. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis shows that the specificity and sensitivity of the SF assay appears to be quite satisfactory. As the level of SF reflects the thrombin generation activity in plasma, it would serve as a strong tool to selectively kick up the state of thrombin generation. These results indicate that the SF could be a specific and reliable parameter for the diagnosis of PASC and contribute to legitimate managements of patients with PASC.
...
PMID:[A novel molecular marker for thrombus formation and life prognosis--clinical usefulness of measurement of soluble fibrin monomer-fibrinogen complex (SF)]. 1516 5
SCH351591, a novel phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitor under investigation as a potential therapeutic for asthma and
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(
COPD
), was evaluated in a 3-month rising-dose study in Cynomolgus monkeys. Four groups, containing four monkeys/sex, received vehicle control or rising doses up to 12, 24, or 48 mg/kg of SCH351591 daily. Although initial exposure produced clinical signs of emesis, reduced food intake, and reduced body weight, tachyphylaxis to the emesis allowed dose escalation up to 48 mg/kg/day. Two monkeys died and 3 were sacrificed in moribund condition over the course of the study. Early mortality, involving monkeys dosed with 12 or 24 mg/kg, was attributed to
sepsis
(2 monkeys) or colon inflammation (3 monkeys). Leukocyte function assays on low- and mid-dose group survivors revealed an inhibition of T lymphocyte proliferation for 12 mg/kg group males and 24 mg/kg group monkeys of both sexes. Necropsy findings, unassociated with early mortality, included reduced size and weight of the thymus, depletion of body fat, red discoloration of the gastric mucosa, and perivascular hemorrhage of the stomach and heart. Stomach and heart gross findings were present in the high-dose group only. Histopathologic lesions, in addition to those attributed to concurrent bacterial infection, included thymic atrophy, serous atrophy of fat, myocardial degeneration and acute to chronic inflammation of small to medium-sized arteries in various organs and tissues including the heart, kidneys, stomach, salivary glands, pancreas, esophagus, gallbladder, and mesentery. The findings of this study demonstrate the potential of a PDE4 inhibitor to alter immunologic response as well as to produce arteriopathy in nonhuman primates.
...
PMID:The toxicity of SCH 351591, a novel phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitor, in Cynomolgus monkeys. 1520 71
C5L2 is an enigmatic serpentine receptor that is co-expressed with the C5a receptor on many cells including polymorphonuclear neutrophils. The apparent absence of coupling of C5L2 with G proteins suggests that this receptor may modulate the biological activity of C5a, perhaps by acting as a decoy receptor. Alternatively, C5L2 may affect C5a function through formation of a heteromeric complex with the C5aR, or it may utilize a G protein-independent signaling pathway. Here we show that in mice bearing a targeted deletion of C5L2, the biological activity of C5a/C5a(desArg) is enhanced both in vivo and in vitro. The biological role of C5L2 thus appears to be limiting to the pro-inflammatory response to the anaphylatoxin. Accordingly, up-regulation of C5L2 may be of benefit in inflammatory states driven by C5a, including
sepsis
, asthma, cystic fibrosis, and
chronic obstructive lung disease
.
...
PMID:An anti-inflammatory function for the complement anaphylatoxin C5a-binding protein, C5L2. 1620 43
A retrospective study of Streptococcus pneumoniae bacteraemia among adult patients in two large teaching hospitals in Spain identified 108 (10.6%) of 1,020 episodes as nosocomial pneumococcal bloodstream infections (NPBIs). Seventy-seven clinical records with sufficient data were available for analysis. The interval between admission and a positive blood culture was 3--135 days (median 17 days; interquartile range 8--27). The main underlying and predisposing conditions for NPBI were malignancy (31%),
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(28.6%), heart failure (16.9%), chronic renal failure (15.6%), liver cirrhosis (13%) and infection with human immunodeficiency virus (13%). Overall, 31.2% of patients developed severe
sepsis
, 11.7% septic shock, and 3.9% multi-organ failure. The main portals of entry were pneumonia (70.1%), meningitis (5.2%) and primary peritonitis (5.2%). Of the responsible serogroups, 78% were included in the 23-valent polysaccharide vaccine. Thirty-five (45.5%) patients died, with death considered to be related to the NPBI in 21 (27.3%) cases. Following multivariate analysis, factors that independently predicted death after adjusting for age were: ultimately fatal underlying disease (OR, 8.9; 95% CI, 0.8--94.3; p<0.001); rapidly fatal underlying disease (OR, 15.0; 95% CI, 2.8--81.3; p<0.001); heart failure (OR, 8.11; 95% CI, 1.1--60.8; p<0.03); inadequate empirical therapy (OR, 10.6; 95% CI, 1.2--97; p<0.003); a severe
sepsis
score (OR, 9.5; 95% CI, 1.9--47.0; p<0.001); and septic shock or multi-organ failure (OR, 63.7; 95% CI, 4.9--820.7; p<0.001). Adequate empirical therapy was an independent protective factor (OR, 0.05; 95% CI, 0.04--0.58; p<0.005), but the use of more than one antimicrobial agent was not.
...
PMID:Nosocomial bloodstream infections caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae. 1621 9
Pulmonary oxidant stress plays an important pathogenetic role in disease conditions including acute lung injury/adult respiratory distress syndrome (ALI/ARDS), hyperoxia, ischemia-reperfusion,
sepsis
, radiation injury, lung transplantation,
COPD
, and inflammation. Reactive oxygen species (ROS), released from activated macrophages and leukocytes or formed in the pulmonary epithelial and endothelial cells, damage the lungs and initiate cascades of pro-inflammatory reactions propagating pulmonary and systemic stress. Diverse molecules including small organic compounds (e.g. gluthatione, tocopherol (vitamin E), flavonoids) serve as natural antioxidants that reduce oxidized cellular components, decompose ROS and detoxify toxic oxidation products. Antioxidant enzymes can either facilitate these antioxidant reactions (e.g. peroxidases using glutathione as a reducing agent) or directly decompose ROS (e.g. superoxide dismutases [SOD] and catalase). Many antioxidant agents are being tested for treatment of pulmonary oxidant stress. The administration of small antioxidants via the oral, intratracheal and vascular routes for the treatment of short- and long-term oxidant stress showed rather modest protective effects in animal and human studies. Intratracheal and intravascular administration of antioxidant enzymes are being currently tested for the treatment of acute oxidant stress. For example, intratracheal administration of recombinant human SOD is protective in premature infants exposed to hyperoxia. However, animal and human studies show that more effective delivery of drugs to cells experiencing oxidant stress is needed to improve protection. Diverse delivery systems for antioxidants including liposomes, chemical modifications (e.g. attachment of masking pegylated [PEG]-groups) and coupling to affinity carriers (e.g. antibodies against cellular adhesion molecules) are being employed and currently tested, mostly in animal and, to a limited extent, in humans, for the treatment of oxidant stress. Further studies are needed, however, in order to develop and establish effective applications of pulmonary antioxidant interventions useful in clinical practice. Although beyond the scope of this review, antioxidant gene therapies may eventually provide a strategy for the management of subacute and chronic pulmonary oxidant stress.
...
PMID:Antioxidant strategies in respiratory medicine. 1640 15
The term cachexia originates from the Greek root kakos hexis, which translates into "bad condition," recognized for centuries as a progressive deterioration of body habitus. Cachexia is commonly associated with a number of disease states, including acute inflammatory processes associated with critical illness and chronic inflammatory diseases, such as cancer, congestive heart failure,
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
, and human immunodeficiency virus infection. Cachexia is responsible for the deaths of 10%-22% of all patients with cancer and approximately 15% of the trauma deaths that occur from
sepsis
-induced organ dysfunction and malnutrition days to weeks after the initial traumatic event. The abnormalities associated with cachexia include anorexia, weight loss, a preferential loss of somatic muscle and fat mass, altered hepatic glucose and lipid metabolism, and anemia. Anorexia alone cannot fully explain the development of cachexia; metabolic alterations in carbohydrate, lipid, and protein metabolism contribute to the severe tissue losses. Despite significant advances in our understanding of specific disease processes, the mechanisms leading to cachexia remain unclear and multifactorial. Although complex, increasing evidence from both animal models and clinical studies suggests that an inflammatory response, mediated in part by a dysregulated production of proinflammatory cytokines, plays a role in the genesis of cachexia, associated with both critical illness and chronic inflammatory diseases. These cytokines are further thought to induce an acute phase protein response (APR) and produce the alterations in lipid and carbohydrate metabolism identified as crucial markers of acute inflammation in states of malignancy and critical illness. Although much is still unknown about the etiology of cachexia, there is growing appreciation that cachexia represents the endproduct of an inappropriate interplay between multiple cytokines, neuropeptides, classic stress hormones, and intermediary substrate metabolism.
...
PMID:The origins of cachexia in acute and chronic inflammatory diseases. 1643 72
Dyspnea is an alarming symptom for both the patient and the emergency physician. There are many causes of dyspnea, some of which are life-threatening, especially in the elderly patient. In addition to the usual cardiac and pulmonary causes such as congestive heart failure, asthma exacerbation,
COPD
, pneumonia, and pulmonary embolism, there are less common causes of dyspnea, which if not diagnosed and managed expeditiously may have dire consequences for both the patient and physician. We present a case of an elderly patient with a life-threatening unusual cause of acute shortness of breath, a diaphragmatic hernia with
sepsis
.
...
PMID:An unusual cause of dyspnea. 1679 52
Levels of the soluble form of the triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells (sTREM)-1 are elevated in severe
sepsis
. However, it is not known whether sTREM-1 measurements can distinguish milder bacterial infections from noninfectious inflammation. The present authors studied whether serum sTREM-1 levels differ in community-acquired pneumonia, exacerbations of
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(
COPD
), asthma and controls, and whether sTREM-1 may be used as a surrogate marker for the need for antibiotics. Serum sTREM-1 levels in 150 patients with pneumonia,
COPD
and asthma exacerbations and 62 healthy controls were measured. Serum sTREM-1 levels were significantly elevated in pneumonia (median 295.2 ng x mL(-1)),
COPD
(280.3 ng x mL(-1)) and asthma exacerbations (184.0 ng x mL(-1)) compared with controls (83.1 ng x mL(-1)). Levels were higher in pneumonia and Anthonisen type 1
COPD
exacerbations than in type 2 and 3
COPD
and asthma exacerbations. The area under the receiver operating characteristics curve for sTREM-1 as a surrogate marker for the need for antibiotics was 0.77. Serum levels of the soluble form of the triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-1 were elevated predominantly in pneumonia and Anthonisen type 1
COPD
exacerbations versus type 2 and 3
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
exacerbations, asthma and controls. Serum levels of the soluble form of the triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-1 has moderate but insufficient accuracy as a surrogate marker for the need for antibiotics in lower respiratory tract infections.
...
PMID:Soluble triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells-1 in acute respiratory infections. 1683 6
The aim of this study was to describe the clinical spectrum of chronic renal failure (CRF) in the elderly. The diagnosis of CRF was made using standard clinical criteria. The elderly was defined as person with over 60 years of age. In total, 200 elderly patients with CRF were evaluated between July 2002 and February 2004. Their age (male: 146; female: 54) ranged between 60 and 90 (mean 64.31+/-4.18) years. Diabetic nephropathy was the most common (46%) cause of CRF. Hypertensive nephrosclerosis, chronic interstitial nephritis and obstructive uropathy were responsible for CRF in 18%, 14% and 13% of patients, respectively. We observed chronic glomerulonephritis in 7% of elderly CRF. Urinary tract infection (55.5%), hypovolemia (22.2%), accelerated hypertension (11.1%) and
sepsis
(11.1%) were responsible for acute exacerbation of renal failure in 36 (18%) patients. Associated co-morbid conditions were noted in 93 (46.5%) patients. They included; coronary artery disease 46 (49.46%), cerebrovascular disease 20 (21.50%), osteoarthritis 13 (13.97%),
chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
6 (6.45%), dilated cardiomyopathy 5 (5.37%), and malignancy in 3 (3.22%) patients. Acute dialytic support was required in 164 (82%) cases and remaining 36 (18%) patients received conservative management. Mortality was noted in 25 (12.5%) cases. The coronary artery disease (48%), acute pulmonary edema (20%) and hyperkalemia (12%) were the main causes of death. Subsequent evaluation revealed that 102 (51%) patients had ESRD of which only 3 (2.94%) patients could afford CAPD. A total of 11 (10.7%) patients underwent chronic maintenance hemodialysis for 3-4 months and then discontinue dialysis mainly because of financial constraints. Remaining 88 (86.27 %) patients with ESRD were discharged from hospital after symptomatic improvement with acute dialysis. Thus, diabetic nephropathy related to type-2 diabetes was the commonest cause of CRF in our elderly patients. Chronic renal failure in elderly was associated with a number of co-morbid conditions, which contributed significantly to morbidity and mortality. Acute on chronic renal failure with severe uremic complications were an important cause of hospitalization. The financial constraint was the major limiting factor for the management of elderly ESRD patients.
...
PMID:Clinical spectrum of chronic renal failure in the elderly: a hospital based study from eastern India. 1709 77
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