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

Splenectomy is a recognized factor predisposing to the late complication of serious sepsis. The meningococcus has been listed as an important organism in postsplenectomy infection. A survey of the literature, however, revealed a total of only 13 documented case reports over a 31-year period, including ten pediatric cases. No documented cases of meningococcal sepsis in children following splenectomy for trauma were found. In an experimental mouse meningococcal infection model, the intraperitoneal LD50 was similar between normal and splenectomized mice (4 X 10(8) v 4 X 10(7) cfu, respectively; P = not significant). Bacteremic patterns were similar in both groups. Uniform survival was seen in normal and splenectomized mice after various intravenous challenge doses of meningococci up to 10(6) cfu. This was associated with efficient bacterial clearance in both groups. It appears unlikely that the defect resulting from splenectomy alone is an important predisposing factor in meningococcal sepsis.
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PMID:Does splenectomy predispose to meningococcal sepsis? An experimental study and clinical review. 370 50

To determine the etiology of apparent meningococcemia, all cases of sepsis with coagulopathy, purpura, and/or adrenal hemorrhage (Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome) with and without shock occurring over a 12-year period were reviewed. A total of 42 cases were identified; 30 cases were caused by Neisseria meningitidis and 12 cases were caused by Haemophilus influenzae. Compared with patients with disease caused by H influenzae, patients with meningococcal disease were older, more often male, more often contracted the disease in winter-spring, and had a longer duration of antecedent symptoms; however, none of these differences was statistically significant. All patients were febrile (greater than 38 degrees C) and appeared toxic. Similar proportions in each group had shock and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy at the time of admission. Ten of 12 patients with H influenzae infection compared with 15/30 (P less than .05) with meningococcal infection were lethargic or comatose at the time of admission. Nine of 12 patients with H influenzae infection died compared with 5/30 with meningococcal disease (P less than .005); the mean time from onset of symptoms to death with H influenzae infection (20.7 +/- 11.4 [SE] hours) was significantly shorter (P less than .05) than with meningococcal infection (120 +/- 74.4 hours). Children with clinical signs of sepsis and with purpura, petechiae, or coagulopathy may have N meningitidis or H influenzae as etiologic agents. Initial antibiotic therapy should be directed against these pathogens.
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PMID:Apparent meningococcemia: clinical features of disease due to Haemophilus influenzae and Neisseria meningitidis. 641 7

Unusual manifestations of meningococcal infection as pneumonia, pericarditis, endocarditis, arthritis, urogenital infections and acute abdominal disease are seen combined with meningitis or septicemia, but can also appear alone without systemic disease. Incidence, diagnosis, clinical symptoms and therapy are briefly discussed with documentation from literature.
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PMID:Unusual manifestations of meningococcal infection. A review. 641 5

Serum lactoferrin concentrations were elevated in almost all children with meningococcal septicemia, in whom the disease had been clinically apparent for less than 18 hours, while the concentrations were normal or only moderately elevated in patients who had had the disease longer before being admitted. Concentrations of C-reactive protein (CRP) were markedly elevated, even with a time lapse of less than six hours, making this the most suitable parameter for the early diagnosis of severe meningococcal infection. Following an operative injury on children the lactoferrin concentrations changed very little. More than six hours after an operation, however, a marked increase in CRP-values was observed, possibly indicating differentiation of this response from that of bacterial infection. The concomitant study of serum alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, orosomucoid and haptoglobin did not uncover results of great significance with regard to early changes.
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PMID:The latency of serum acute phase proteins in meningococcal septicemia, with special emphasis on lactoferrin. 660 36

Host inflammatory response to meningococcal infection is believed to be a major determinant of disease severity. Isogenic mutants of Neisseria meningitidis serogroup B1940, which differ in expression of capsular polysaccharide and lipooligosaccharide (LOS), were used to examine host responses in a whole blood model of bacteremia and a model of endothelial injury. The parent organism caused significantly less neutrophil shedding of the adhesion molecule, L-selectin, than the three mutant organisms (P < .01) and was most resistant to the bactericidal activity of whole blood. Despite marked differences in bacterial adhesion to endothelial cells (P < .05), no damage was induced by organisms alone. Endothelial injury was observed when neutrophils were incubated with adherent, capsule-deficient organisms (P < .05). The degree of endothelial damage was related to the number of neutrophils adherent to the endothelium. Thus, bacterial capsulation and LOS structure can influence neutrophil activation and endothelial injury and, as such, may be important in the pathogenesis of meningococcal sepsis.
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PMID:The influence of capsulation and lipooligosaccharide structure on neutrophil adhesion molecule expression and endothelial injury by Neisseria meningitidis. 853 55

Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) plays a central role in the pathophysiology of sepsis. Levels of TNF-alpha are directly correlated with severity in meningococcal disease (MD). A polymorphism in the promoter region of the TNF-alpha gene is associated with differences in the secretion of TNF-alpha. The TNF2 allele is associated with higher constitutive and inducible levels of TNF-alpha secretion than is the TNF1 allele. To investigate whether possession of the TNF2 allele is associated with severity in MD, the frequency of TNF1 and TNF2 alleles in 98 children with MD was compared. There were more deaths among children who had the TNF2 allele (P = .03; relative risk [RR], 2.5; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.1-5.7) than in those who did not. There was also an increased risk of severe disease in children with the TNF2 allele (P = .02; RR, 1.6; 95% CI, 1.1-2.3). Possession of the TNF2 allele predisposes to a worse outcome in children with meningococcal infection.
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PMID:Variation in the tumor necrosis factor-alpha gene promoter region may be associated with death from meningococcal disease. 884 35

Meningococcal infection is a contagious disease that is spread via the respiratory route through pharyngeal secretions. Clinical manifestations range from occult bacteremia to overwhelming septicemia or meningitis. Skin manifestations often develop and may be the first sign that leads to clinical suspicion of meningococcemia. Treatment consists of antibiotic therapy and supportive care, which may include aggressive fluid resuscitation, oxygen, ventilatory support, and inotropic support. The use of chemoprophylaxis and in certain circumstances vaccination are important in preventing secondary cases of meningococcal disease.
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PMID:Meningococcemia. 895 65

Thirty-eight patients (31 children and 7 adults) with meningococcal infection (sepsis and/or meningitis) were studied. The strain most frequently isolated was B (44.7%), followed by C (31.6%). Of the strains isolated, 52.6% were moderately resistant to penicillin (91.6% if only strain C was considered). No resistance to cephotaxime or chloramphenicol was found. Even though patients with moderately resistant strains treated with penicillin G evolved satisfactorily (minimum inhibitory concentrations 0.12-0.50 microgram/ml), the possible appearance of more resistant strains and/or of strains that produce beta-lactamase leads us to the conclusion that cephotaxime is the treatment of choice until an antibiogram is available.
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PMID:[Neisseria meningitidis strains with decreased susceptibility to penicillin and ampicillin]. 977 64

Patients expected to develop life-threatening complications in acute meningococcal infections require early recognition and appropriate monitoring. Different prognostic scoring systems have been developed. Three of them, chosen according to their bedside availability, were compared with our clinical observations. Twenty consecutive cases of proven meningococcal infection were admitted to the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) of the Free University of Brussels (AZ-VUB). Biological and clinical features required for prognostic scoring were evaluated as soon as possible after admission. Glasgow meningococcal sepsis prognostic score (GMSPS), Neisseria sepsis index (NESI) and Algren criteria were retrospectively calculated and evaluated for their prognostic significance. Neisseria meningitidis was cultured from blood and cerebrospinal fluid in 11 patients and from blood in only nine patients. The age of the patients was between 1 and 15 years (mean 4.1 years). All patients received the same therapy on admission. Four patients died with a multiorgan failure within 18 hours. The three scoring systems in these four patients predicted death. Overall, the GMSPS score, the NESI score and the Algren criteria predicted death in respectively 10, nine and five patients. Death was falsely predicted in six patients by the GMSPS score, in five patients by the NESI score and in one patient by the Algren criteria. The Algren criteria predicted the severity of the clinical process more accurately than did the GMSPS and NESI scores. However, such predictability should be cautiously used even when 100% mortality is predicted. It might be used in decision-making in regard to the following issues: patient transfer to tertiary centres and mode of transportation, monitoring of patients in intensive care units, early insertion of invasive cardiovascular monitoring catheters and consideration of new or even experimental therapy. However, one should be extremely cautious of taking any therapeutically or ethical decision on the basis of one or more of the described scoring system, since we showed the lack of precision concerning the outcome of paediatric patients with meningococcaemia.
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PMID:Evaluation of scoring systems in acute meningococcaemia. 1064 33

The clinical manifestations and course of meningococcal disease have been well described, but atypical presentations may, if unrecognized, lead to a delay in treatment. We describe here an unusual case of this disease in a 21-y-old woman who presented with an acute rigid abdomen, clinical and laboratory features of sepsis, shock and early DIC with no indication of meningococcal infection. She developed a rapidly spreading purpuric rash, conjunctival haemorrhages, hypotension and tachycardia and a low urine output. Laboratory investigations showed a low platelet count, low haemoglobin and normal WBC. A presumptive diagnosis of meningococcal septicaemia was made and recovery followed treatment with cefotaxime, fluids and inotropes. A fully sensitive Neisseria meningitis Group C, type 2a, subtype NT was isolated from blood cultures, but not from CSF obtained after antibiotic treatment.
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PMID:Acute abdomen as an atypical presentation of meningococcal septicaemia. 1022 2


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