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)

Hepatic tumors have been associated with oral contraceptive (OC) use. Klatkin's literature review of 1976 yielded a total of 237 cases of OC-associated hepatic tumors; 9% of these were considered malignant. This paper presents a case of liver cell adenoma which developed when a 34-year old patient was using OCs. Contraceptive use was discontinued and the lesion regressed, but a hepatocellular carcinoma developed 3 years later. The woman presented in 1976 complaining of acute right upper quadrant abdominal pain. A hemorrhagic hepatic tumor 16 cm in diameter was diagnosed after an exploratory laparotomy. The patient discontinued use of Ovulen 21 which she had been using for 5 years and was followed up with serial liver scans. The mass shrank to approximately 5 cm in diameter by January 1979 and remained stable until November 1979 when liver scan revealed that the tumor had reverted to its 16 cm size. In December 1979, a partial hepatectomy was done but it was complicated by a cardiac arrest. A postpericardiotomy syndrome developed after the operation. 5 weeks postoperatively, in January 1980, the patient suffered constrictive pericarditis and a pericardial stripping operation was done. The patient later died of sepsis with high output cardiac failure, shock, and adult respiratory distress syndrome. Ultrastructural studies of the tumor revealed a well-differentiated hepatocellular carcinoma. The features of the tumor (e.g., travecular growth, necrosis, hemorrhage) have been the criteria, in addition to vascular invasion and metastases, used to classify previously reported cases as malignant. Autopsy of the patient revealed no metastatic lesions. Cytoplasmic structures suggestive of a phospholipid disturbance were also observed and were thought to be related to drug interference with phospholipid metabolism. An interesting observation was the regression of the tumor after discontinuance of pill use. The mechanisms of its renewed growth and its malignant change remain unknown. Lesions such as this should be given a guarded prognosis even if the appearance is benign. Possible metabolic or enzyme deficiency in the few women in whom hepatic tumors develop is raised.
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PMID:Hepatocellular adenoma. Its transformation to carcinoma in a user of oral contraceptives. 626 14

Major hepatic resections were performed on 138 patients for a variety of conditions. There was one intraoperative death. Including this patient, there were 15 deaths within 30 days of the operation (operative mortality 10.9%). Important postoperative complications were intra-abdominal sepsis (17%), biliary leak (11%), hepatic failure (8%), and hemorrhage (6%). The results of 30 resections for the benign lesions, liver cell adenoma, focal nodular hyperplasia, hemangioma, and cystadenoma showed no operative mortality and low morbidity. Of 26 patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, seven died within a month of operation. The cumulative survival of the 26 at five years was 38%, and of the 19 who survived the procedure, 51%. Poor survival followed resections for cholangiocarcinoma and "mixed tumors." The five-year cumulative survival of 22 patients who had colorectal metastases excised was 31%. Apart from a patient with carcinoid, prolonged survival was rare after resection of other secondaries and after en bloc resections for tumors directly invading the liver. Hepatic resection was of value in the management of some patients with hepatic trauma, Caroli's disease, liver cysts, and intrahepatic stones.
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PMID:Major hepatic resection. A 25-year experience. 629 17

Rhabdoid tumor of the kidney (RTK), originally described as a monophasic sarcomatous variant of Wilms' tumor, is now recognized as a highly malignant, non-Wilms' tumor possibly of neuroectodermal origin. Twenty-one National Wilms' Tumor Study patients with this tumor were treated in the years 1969 through 1978. Mean patient age was 18 months with 16 of the 21 younger than 2 years at diagnosis. Two patients were Stage 1, 10 Stage II, 5 Stage III, and 4 Stage IV. One patient only is continuously disease free and another is surviving disease free following excision of bilateral pulmonary metastases. One patient died of sepsis early during therapy. Thus 18 of the 19 patients who relapsed died, 15 within 1 year of diagnosis, all with progressive tumor growth. The rapid appearance of metastases (mean 4 months), often to multiple sites, and short subsequent survival signal a very malignant tumor resistant to current treatment stratagems.
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PMID:Clinical aspects of the rhabdoid tumor of the kidney: a report of the National Wilms' Tumor Study Group. 631 Mar 57

During a period of 7 years, we have aggressively treated liver tumors whether primary or metastatic. Our experience after 43 curative major liver resections has shown an excellent overall survival: 34 of 43 patients still alive a median of 12 months after liver resection (patient ages ranged from 21 to 85 years, median 57 years). Nineteen patients underwent right hepatic lobectomy, 9 trisegmentectomy, 5 left hepatic lobectomy, 5 extended left hepatic lobectomy, 4 right lobectomy plus left lobe wedge resection, and 1 patient underwent a major hilar wedge resection. Two patients died from sepsis and hepatic failure on or before the 60th postoperative day. One patient with no evidence of recurrent colorectal cancer was lost to follow-up after 2.5 years. One patient died without cancer 12 months after left hepatic lobectomy for colon cancer metastases. Cumulative survival for the entire series and for patients after resection of colorectal cancer metastases was the same: 1 year survival 90 percent; 2 year survival 75 percent, and 3 year survival 65 percent. Seventeen of 30 patients remain disease-free after resection of liver metastases. Of the 13 who had recurrence, 8 are still alive. Ten recurrences were outside of the residual liver (predominantly multiple pulmonary metastases). One recurrence was in the right hemidiaphragm, and only three were in the residual or regenerated liver. Serial carcinoembryonic antigen analysis was the best indicator of recurrence in these 13 patients, 12 of whom were asymptomatic. These data confirm that major liver resection can be performed with minimum postoperative mortality (4.7 percent in this series). More importantly, the majority of patients were cured of their liver metastases. The next goal should be the initiation of adjuvant systemic therapy trials after liver resection in such patients.
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PMID:Patterns of failure after surgical cure of large liver tumors. A change in the proximate cause of death and a need for effective systemic adjuvant therapy. 632 4

From 1976 to 1981, 28 episodes of group B streptococcus (GBS) septicemia were identified in our hospital (CHUV, University Hospital Lausanne), 18 in 17 adults and 10 in newborns. The latter had acute respiratory distress syndrome (8 cases) or meningitis (2 cases). In adults the skin was the main source of infection (6 diabetic foot, 4 acute cellulitis complicating chronic skin diseases, 2 infections secondary to diagnostic procedures (capillary and ascitic taps) and 1 meningitis secondary to neurosurgery). The other sources of infection were 1 pharyngitis, 1 pneumonia and 1 pyelonephritis. Eleven patients had an underlying disease (7 diabetes and 4 malignancies). Four patients developed septic osteoarticular metastases, one after a 3 weeks' course of antibiotic. In the latter case, as well as in the two adult patients who died, the strains of GBS were found to be tolerant to penicillin. Thus, GBS septicemia are not rare in adults and occur often in compromised hosts such as diabetics. The portal of entry is frequently the skin and the course may be severe with distant complications.
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PMID:[Streptococcus group B septicemia. Analysis of 18 cases in adults and 10 in newborn infants]. 633 80

The oncology patient can experience medical or surgical emergencies as a result of effects of the primary tumor, metastases, or systemic effects of the disease. Emergencies unrelated to the primary oncologic diagnosis, such as acute myocardial infarction, drug overdose, or gastrointestinal hemorrhage, also may occur. For this reason routine emergency protocols and diagnostic procedures should be followed in the treatment of oncology patients. We review the major oncologic-related emergencies, including central nervous system and spinal cord compression, airway obstruction, cardiac tamponade, gastrointestinal obstruction, adrenal insufficiency and hypercalcemia, sepsis, and coagulopathies. Medical and surgical emergencies in the oncology patient should be treated aggressively in the emergency department because a determination about the quality of life of the patient, or the reversibility of the acute process, often cannot be answered quickly in the emergency setting.
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PMID:Emergency evaluation of the cancer patient. 646 53

Small bowel carcinoid tumors usually metastasize to regional lymph nodes and the liver but metastases to the neck are extremely rare. Over a ten-year period 48 cases of small bowel carcinoid were diagnosed at our institution and of these, three cases (6%) were associated with neck metastases--one to the thyroid gland and two to cervical lymph nodes. The former patient and one of the latter patients had symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome. The other patient was asymptomatic and presented with a solitary neck mass. Urine levels of 5-hydroxyindolacetic acid (5-HIAA) were elevated in the two symptomatic patients but were undetectable in the asymptomatic patient. Extirpation of the involved cervical nodes and the primary small bowel lesion was performed in two patients. In addition, both patients have received chemotherapy with 5-fluorouracil. One patient remains asymptomatic four years after diagnosis but the other patient continues to have five to six bowel movements per day nine months after operation. Small bowel resection was performed in the patient with a metastasis to the thyroid. This patient died of sepsis after a second operation for an intraabdominal abscess. The histological patterns of the primary tumor and the metastatic lesions were similar and the cells of the metastases contained argentaffin-positive granules. We conclude that 1) an intraabdominal carcinoid tumor should be considered as the location of the primary tumor in patients who present with a neck mass containing metastatic carcinoid and 2) the prognosis for patients with extraabdominal metastases is similar to that for patients with intraabdominal disease only.
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PMID:Cervical metastases from small bowel carcinoid tumors. 663 95

The influence of tumor load, surgical trauma, and bacterial sepsis upon the ability of patient's peripheral leukocytes to produce interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha), the detectable serum IFN levels and circulating serum IFN inactivators were studied. Peripheral blood leukocytes of patients with solid tumors had significantly reduced ability to produce IFN-alpha. Complete resectional surgery resulted in restoration of their ability to produce normal IFN-alpha levels. Circulating IFN levels were detectable in 70% of patients with localized disease while only in 20% of patients with metastatic disease. Interferon-alpha activators were detected in 45% of all patients. Both circulating interferon and IFN-alpha inactivators became undetectable upon tumor resection. Surgical trauma is accompanied by a transient but definite decrease in IFN-alpha production capability. Bacterial sepsis during postoperative days, in patients who successfully recovered, was definitely accompanied by increase in IFN-alpha production capability. Our findings suggest that advanced malignant epithelial tumors have an adverse effect upon the patient's ability to produce interferon and are often accompanied by the presence of circulating serum interferon inactivators. These effects can be reversed by surgical resection of the malignant neoplasm.
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PMID:The effect of malignant epithelial tumors, surgical therapy, and bacterial sepsis upon various parameters of interferon system. 672 84

Six patients with Clostridium septicum sepsis seen at Duke University Medical Center over a two-year period also had other abnormalities, consisting of hematologic disorders in 3 and colon tumors in 3. Three patients died of sepsis; 2 survived following disarticulation of the arm to control gas gangrene, while the sixth patient survived the sepsis but died of metastatic disease. When anaerobic cultures are positive for C. septicum, antibiotics should be given immediately. The high incidence of underlying colon tumor, especially in the cecum, should prompt consideration of a barium-enema examination.
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PMID:Clostridium septicum infection associated with colonic carcinoma and hematologic abnormality. 693 62

A case of primary osteogenic sarcoma of the skull with metastases to the lungs, left diaphragm, 2nd lumbar and 1st sacral vertebral bodies, and both femoral heads was presented. A young man with a lump over his right parieto-occipital region since the age of 14 had noticed rapid growth of the mass after having experienced definite head trauma. The tumor was surgically removed and the bony defect was repaired with a stainless stell plate. The recurrence of the tumor mass was suppressed by 60Co irradiation, but a necrotic lesion developed over the right temporal scalp. Twenty-two months after the surgical removal of the tumor, the patient died of respiratory failure and septicemia.
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PMID:Primary osteogenic sarcoma of the skull: case report. 694


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