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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A nineteen-month-old child presented with a febrile illness, skin rash, painful swelling of the joints, lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly. Pseudomonas was cultured from the blood during life and, subsequently, at autopsy. Autopsy revealed a generalized panarteritis involving the coronary, retroperitoneal and pulmonary arteries with thickening of arterial walls and narrowing of the lumina. Thrombi and foci of necrosis and infarcts were found in many organs. Numerous bacilli were present in fresh lesions, but not in the organizing lesions. Periodic acid-Schiff-positive deposits were found in occasional macrophages, in walls of affected vessels, in the marginal sinuses of lymph nodes and diffusely in epicardial and retroperitoneal adipose tissue. The findings suggest that some or even all cases of
Kawasaki's disease
and infantile polyarteritis nodosa may be caused by Pseudomonas
sepsis
. It is also suggested that the vasculitis and paucity of inflammatory reaction in many cases of Pseudomonas
sepsis
might be related to the fact that many strains of Pseudomonas produce high-molecular-weight levan (or another polysaccharide). This compound is known to inhibit the inflammatory reaction and to increase bacterial pathogenicity.
...
PMID:Kawasaki's disease and infantile polyarteritis nodosa: is Pseudomonas infection responsible? Report of a case. 3 42
Two cases of atypical
Kawasaki disease
are reported. Case 1 was a five-month-old male infant admitted to this hospital with a 10-day's history of high fever. On examination, he appeared ill-looking and only hepatomegaly was noted. Laboratory studies showed leukocytosis, thrombocytosis, elevated ESR and pleocytosis in CSF. He was treated as
sepsis
with meningitis. Sudden death occurred on the eighth day of admission, and left coronary artery aneurysm with thrombosis was noted at autopsy. Case 2 was a four-month-old male infant referred to our hospital with fever and cervical lymphadenopathy of 11 day's duration, and unresponsive to antibiotics. Skin rash had developed after oxacillin injection. Echocardiogram, performed on the third day of admission, disclosed a 5-8 mm aneurysm of the left coronary artery and a 4 mm aneurysm of the right coronary artery. Before a specific diagnostic test for
Kawasaki disease
becomes available, we suggest that a possible diagnosis of
Kawasaki disease
and echocardiographic evaluation should be considered in case of (1) presence of partial criteria of
Kawasaki disease
with thrombocytosis; and/or (2) young infants with prolonged unexplained fever.
...
PMID:Atypical Kawasaki disease: report of two cases. 151 14
A male infant and a three year old girl, both with acute febrile illness, were admitted to our hospital for suspected meningitis/
sepsis
and gastroenteritis/severe viral infection, respectively. Both showed all six principal features of
Kawasaki syndrome
and revealed several other symptoms and laboratory findings commonly associated with the disease. The infant had multiple coronary aneurysms. The girl developed ascites, pancreatitis and iritis, all of which are seldomly recognized symptoms of the
Kawasaki syndrome
. The prompt and satisfactory therapeutic responses of both patients to the combined therapy consisting of oral acetylsalicylic acid (50-100 mg/kg b.w./d) and intravenous gamma-globuline (400 mg/kg b.w./d) at the eight and even eleventh day of illness support the use of gamma-globuline therapy beyond the first week of the disease. Prior to their illnesses both children had been exposed to carpet shampoo, an agent which has been repeatedly associated with an increased risk of
Kawasaki syndrome
.
...
PMID:[Kawasaki syndrome. Association with exposure to carpet shampoo and successful therapy with immunoglobulins in the second week of the illness]. 161 54
The patient was diagnosed as having
Kawasaki's disease
. Streptococci were isolated from cultures of all blood samples collected during the acute stage (the third, fifth and seventh day of the disease). The streptococci were subsequently identified as Streptococcus sanguis (
MCLS
-1) and Streptococcus pyogenes. This finding may suggest induction of
Kawasaki's disease
by S. sanguis
MCLS
-1, and in this case, the complication of
septicemia
by S. pyogenes.
...
PMID:[A case of Kawasaki's disease combined with septicemia--isolation of Streptococcus sanguis (MCLS-1) and Streptococcus pyogenes from blood at the acute stage]. 206 85
The availability of safe and effective preparations of human immune globulin that can be administered intravenously has revolutionized replacement therapy for patients suffering from hypogammaglobulinaemia. Of equal importance and greater interest, however, has been the recognition that super physiological doses of IgG can manipulate an abnormal immune system. Future prospects for the use of immunoglobulin preparations to supply specific antibodies includes the standardization of procedures, whereby patients with acute
sepsis
may receive antibiotics and immunoglobulin simultaneously. Already there is in vitro evidence that suggests that opsonized bacteria are more readily affected by aminoglycosides. It seems certain that gamma globulin will be used routinely in the management of patients with a number of immunomalignancies, such as chronic lymphatic leukaemia and multiple myeloma that feature hypogammaglobulinaemia, especially when chemotherapy is being administered. Control trials are underway to determine whether gamma globulin given intravenously to premature babies will satisfactorily correct their immuno-deficient state and improve their chances of survival. The immunomanipulative capacity of immunoglobulin is yet to be fully realized. Success in ideopathic thrombocytopenic purpura had led to a trial of gamma globulin in a number of autoimmune conditions. Success has been reported in myasthenia gravis, rheumatoid arthritis, diabetes, patients with circulating antibodies to factor VIII and
Kawasaki's disease
. The mechanism of action is unknown but almost certainly multifactorial. Two proven mechanisms that will be added to in the future, include blockade of the Fc receptors on cells of the reticulo-endothelial system and manipulation of immunoregulatory T cells by the presence of anti-idiotypic antibodies in the preparation.
...
PMID:The clinical use of intravenous gammaglobulin. 244 Jul 43
Septicemia
encountered at
Kawasaki
Municipal Hospital between 1985 and 1986 were studied clinically. Forty six patients had monomicrobial and 5 has polymicrobial infections, respectively. Out of these 46 patients with
septicemia
, 17 were due to Escherichia coli, 7 were due to Klebsiella pneumoniae and 4 were due to Staphylococcus aureus. Ten patients had hepatobiliary, 7 had hematological, 7 had malignant diseases as underlying diseases, respectively. Out of 10 patients complicated with septic shock, 7 died. Twenty three patients were community acquired infections. The age of most of the patients were over 50. The mortality rate of more than 65-year-old patients were higher than that of other patients. Our of 5 patients with
septicemia
due to polymicrobial infection, only 1 patient with erythroleukemia died. Fifty patients were treated mainly with beta-lactam antibiotics such as piperacillin or cefmetazole alone or in combination with aminoglycosides and so on. Three patients with infective endocarditis were encountered during this period. Two were due to alpha-streptococcus and 1 was due to Enterococcus. A 41-year-old patient with mitral valve insufficiency and metastatic gastric carcinoma to the bone marrow were complicated with disseminated intravascular coagulation. This patient, however, was successfully treated with a daily dose of 24 mega units of benzylpenicillin, and was given gabexate mesilate, concomitantly.
...
PMID:[Clinical studies on septicemia and infective endocarditis encountered between 1985-1986]. 250 8
At the present time there are three commercially available intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) preparations. There is no distinct therapeutic advantage for any one product over any other. Intravenous immunoglobulin is currently approved for the treatment of antibody deficiency syndromes and for acute and chronic idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura. In addition, controlled clinical trials have demonstrated efficacy for the treatment of
Kawasaki disease
and for the prevention of the following infections:
sepsis
in preterm neonates,
sepsis
in infants with AIDS, and cytomegalovirus infection in the immune-compromised host. Open (uncontrolled) studies have suggested benefit in the treatment of neonatal
sepsis
, chronic Epstein-Barr virus infection, and a number of autoimmune diseases. Additional carefully designed studies must be completed before IVIG therapy can be recommended for these latter categories. In published reports, dosage of IVIG and intervals between infusions have varied considerably. For all current indications, the physician must therefore individualize treatment and thoroughly review any recent literature that may clarify guidelines to IVIG therapy. Significant adverse reactions are rare but high cost remains the main obstacle to more routine implementation.
...
PMID:Intravenous immunoglobulin: new clinical applications. 282 63
Coronary arteries in six children who had
Kawasaki disease
but lacked coronary arterial aneurysms were examined. Four children died of myocarditis at the acute stage, and two children died of bacterial
sepsis
or as a result of an occurrence during cineangiography at the healed stage. Twenty-one children without
Kawasaki disease
were examined as controls. The six children with
Kawasaki disease
had no thrombi, recanalization, or stenosis greater than 50% in the major coronary arteries. Three patients had dilatation of the major coronary arteries at the acute stage. Two of the three patients died during the acute stage, and autopsy showed slight dilatation of coronary arteries and abnormal intimal thickening due to panvasculitis. In the third child, who died at the healed stage, dilatation of the coronary arteries detected by two-dimensional echocardiography at the acute stage had disappeared at the healed stage. No dilatation of the major coronary arteries was seen at autopsy. However, abnormal fibrous intimal thickening of the major coronary arteries without inflammatory changes was found. The other three patients had no dilatation of the major coronary arteries at the acute stage. Two patients died at the acute stage, and slight inflammation without abnormal intimal thickening was seen in the intima and the adventitial area. In the third patient, who died during the healed stage, two-dimensional echocardiography revealed no dilatation during the clinical course, and there was no inflammatory changes or abnormal intimal thickening at autopsy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pathological features of coronary arteries in children with Kawasaki disease in which coronary arterial aneurysm was absent at autopsy. Quantitative analysis. 339 71
In a 9-month prospective study conducted in an urban emergency room, 15 children with rectal temperature greater than 41.1 degrees C (106 degrees F) were evaluated. Seven of the 15 patients were admitted to the hospital. Two children who were discharged home required subsequent admission, and six were managed on an ambulatory basis. Eight (53.3%) children had serious disease: two bacterial meningitis, two bacteremia without meningitis, two pneumonia, one pericarditis with effusion, and one
Kawasaki disease
. In four, the final diagnosis indicated a much more serious illness than was considered initially. The laboratory studies did not correlate reliably with the final diagnosis or need for admission. Children with a rectal temperature greater than 41.1 degrees C are at high risk for a life-threatening illness and should be evaluated for
sepsis
and meningitis.
...
PMID:Association of temperature greater than 41.1 degrees C (106 degrees F) with serious illness. 396 27
Experiments aimed at producing a model of
Kawasaki's disease
by injecting animals intraperitoneally with Pseudomonas bacilli are described. Injection of large numbers of bacilli into mice caused rapidly fatal
sepsis
. With appropriate numbers of organisms, some mice died within 3 days, most remained healthy, while in some an inapparent chronic disease developed. Positive blood cultures were occasionally obtained 4-17 weeks after the slow infection. An alcohol-precipitable polysaccharide, which could be measured by Roe's procedure for levan, was found in 20% of the experimentally infected mice. We suggest that this substance was partly responsible for the course of the infection. Severe vasculitis with little acute inflammatory reaction and carditis with coronary aneurysms were often obtained by injecting mice and guinea-pigs with supraliminal doses of bacilli at the same time as their immune system was impaired by treatment with either nitrogen-mustard or cyclophosphamide. We suggest that pseudomonas infection in immunologically deficient animals may mimic
Kawasaki's disease
and that a similar mechanism may operate in the natural form of the disease in children.
...
PMID:Can pseudomonas infection in experimental animals mimic Kawasaki's disease? 654 20
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