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)

39 instances of mural thrombosis of the right side of the heart were observed among 2000 cases of post-mortem examinations. The right atrium was the most frequent site of thrombosis; the right ventricle was involved in 8 cases. The relationships between right sided thrombosis and rhythm disturbances, myocardial or valvular disease, myocardial infarction, pulmonary disease, neoplasm, sepsis and disturbance of coagulation are discussed. The high incidence of pulmonary embolism and their relationship with thrombosis of the right side of the heart are emphasized.
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PMID:[Mural thromboses of the right heart. Clinico-pathological study]. 31 49

We report a case of Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome in a 3 1/2-year-old boy. The patient developed reticulum cell sarcoma primarily in the brain; a biopsy specimen was obtained, and treatment with irradiation and chemotherapy was begun. Computerized tomography performed after three months of therapy showed remarkable regression of tumor. When the patient died five months postoperatively, no viable tumor was present; death was the result of pneumonia and sepsis. Only two previous cases of lymphoreticular neoplasm confined to the brain and associated with this syndrome have been described. We discuss the relationship between immunodeficiency and the occurrence of neoplasia in this syndrome.
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PMID:Primary reticulum cell sarcoma of the brain in Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. Report of a case. 33 30

An incidental finding at autopsy in a 55-year-old woman who died of complications of uterine cervical carcinoma was a 3 cm long polyp attached to the rete of Chiari in the right atrium. The lesion was interpreted grossly as either a pedunculated metastasis to the heart or an unusual atrial tumor. Histologic examination revealed it to be a fungus ball composed of regularly grouped Candida mycelia. The patient's history revealed Candida septicemia several months prior to death for which she had been treated by heavy doses of antibiotics administered through indwelling catheter. The causes of this unusual anatomo-pathologic finding are discussed in the light of our observations and those reviewed in the literature.
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PMID:[A candida bezoar in the Chiari reticulum of the right heart atrium]. 34 43

DDMP, a diaminopyrimidine folate antagonist, was given to 26 tumor patients in a dosage of 50 mg/m2 per week orally, simultaneously with 3 mg CF i.m. or i.v. The CF dose was increased to 30 mg in patients showing evidence of toxicity, and withdrawn in the absence of toxicity. The dose-limiting toxicity was seen in myelosuppression, particularly thrombopenia and skin rashes. At the 3 mg CF level, 18 out of 26 patients developed toxicity. No toxicity was seen at the 30 mg CF level in 11 patients. After cessation of CF, toxicity occurred in five out of seven patients. After the onset of toxicity, CF was added as a delayed rescue, in a dosage of 15 mg every 8 h or 30-60 mg daily. One patient died of sepsis with agranulocytosis. All other patients recovered from myelosuppression within 1 or 2 weeks. Objective responses were observed in seven patients, four of the ten with epidermoid cancer of the head and neck, two out of eight with epidermoid cancer of the lung, and one out of three with melanoma.
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PMID:Initial clinical experience with a simultaneous combination of 2,4-diamino-5(3',4'-dichlorophenyl)-6-methylpyrimidine (DDMP) with folinic acid. 37 10

Human infection by Malassez and Vignal's bacillus (Yersinia pseudotuberculosis) can take many clinical aspects, the most frequent of which is mesenteric adenitis with pseudoappendicular syndrome, but occasionally also appearing as a tumor of the right lower abdominal quadrant. In a subsequent stage this mesenteric adenitis is often accompanied by erythema nodosum. There also exist some septicemia-like forms, which have become more and more frequent of late, always appearing on a particular terrain (predisposed persons). These various forms all correspond to contamination via the digestive route. Other, more exceptional modes of contamination may result in much rarer forms, such as ocular or pulmonary forms. Diagnosis is based on: (a) demonstrating the presence of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, (b) serodiagnosis, (c) a positive intradermal reaction, (d) the characteristic aspect of lymph node lesions. Pseudotuberculosis is extremely frequent in animals. Many species, most of them rodents or birds, can serve as healthy carriers. This is how cats, through their access to this natural "reservoir", get contaminated and thus act as a "conveyor belt" in transmitting the disease to man.
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PMID:Pseudotuberculosis in man: possible epidemiological role of the cats. 40 Sep 44

A retrospective analysis of the results of treatment of advanced rectal cancer of the pelvis with regional intraarterial infusion of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) is reported. A special technic for positioning the catheters selectively in the internal iliac arteries justifies this analysis. Four patients with primary inextirpable rectal cancer and 10 patients with locally recurrent rectal cancer have been treated. No immediate mortality was noted. Relief of pain was noted in two-thirds of the patients. An objective tumor response was noted in three patients with locally recurrent disease. In one patient with primary inoperable cancer it was possible to extirpate the tumor after infusion therapy. An improvement in quality of life during the first 2 months after therapy was achieved in half of the patients as judged by their performance. Complications were not serious. Hematomas with infection were seen in one patient, two patients had septicemia, and three patients had transient oliguria. Transient thrombocytopenia was reported in two patients. The results indicate that infusion therapy produces a reasonable response such as palliation of pain. Only minor complications were seen and easily controlled. The advantages of infusion therapy are that it can be given in a reasonable time with only a short hospital stay.
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PMID:Intraarterial infusion chemotherapy (5-fluorouracil) in patients with inextirpable or locally recurrent rectal cancer. 45 69

Anastomotic failure complicated the postoperative course of 11 per cent of 350 gastric cancer patients who underwent total gastrectomy and esophagogastrectomy and was responsible for 33 per cent of all operative deaths. The extent of disease and the presence of tumor at the margin of resection did not prove to be significant factors in regard to the incidence of anastomotic failure. Gastrectomy combined with resection of other organs was associated with a significantly higher risk of failure. End-to-end esophagogastrectomy and esophagoduodenostomy appeared to be prone to failure, while Roux-en Y, jejunal pouch, and jejunal loop reconstructions were safer. Patients with severe intraabdominal or intrathoracic sepsis had a poor prognosis, and their management with surgical or conservative methods was ineffective. On the basis of these findings, alternatives to manual methods of visceral suturing should be considered.
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PMID:Anastomotic failure complicating total gastrectomy and esophagogastrectomy for cancer of the stomach. 47 76

Necrotizing lesions of the colon occur in patients with malignancy. We identified 26 patients with cancer (23 with acute leukemia and three with solid tumors) who died from necrotizing colitis. Autopsies revealed three pathologic categories: pseudomembranous colitis in 69 per cent, agranulocytic colitis in 19 per cent and ischemic colitis in 12 per cent. Most died from sepsis. A comparison of characteristics was made with a control population matched for diagnosis, age, cause of death and duration of neoplasia. Nearly all patients in both groups had fever and were granulocytopenic secondary to chemotherapy. Most received antineoplastic and antimicrobial regimens during the month prior to their terminal illness. Abdominal pain and distention, stomatitis and necrotizing pharyngitis were frequently associated with colitis. Hyperbilirubinemia was a frequent late complication in those with colitis and the control group. Single and multiorganism septicemia were found more frequently in patients with colitis. As antemortem diagnosis was unusual, aggressive attempts at diagnosis are necessary to assess the true incidence of this disorder and the best therapy.
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PMID:Necrotizing colitis in patients with cancer. 49 35

The clinical findings, pathologic features, and outcome were investigated in 46 patients in whom Torulopsis glabrata was isolated in 131 specimens of blood. Nineteen of the patients had only a single positive blood culture and no evidence of systemic yeast infection, while 27 patients had a clinically significant fungemia based upon the occurrence of 2 or more positive blood cultures, or the combination of a positive blood culture and isolation of the organism from a closed body cavity or demonstration of the yeast in tissue sections. The predisposing factors to the development of fungemia included the presence of intravenous lines, indwelling Foley catheters, antibiotics and surgery, especially when the gastrointestinal tract was involved. Only 22% of patients received either steroids or cytostatic agents. Possible portals of entry were suggested by the prior isolation of the organism from urine, sputum, wounds, and central venous catheter tips in most of the patients. Twelve of 27 patients with clinically significant fungemia were treated. The initial mode of therapy in nine patients was removal of intravenous lines because of the clinical suspicion of catheter related sepsis. Seven of the patients improved rapidly and one more after amphotericin B was subsequently administered. Amphotericin B was the initial therapy in three cases. One patient was cured while another died of an unrelated infection. Five patients were not treated although the isolation of T. glabrata had been reported; the fact that the presence of the organism was felt to be unimportant was considered to be a factor in the delay of treatment. In the remaining 10 patients the organism was isolated only after the patient had died. Division of the patients into four groups based upon whether the individuals survived, died of unrelated disease, died with potentially lethal infection, or died with T. glabrata infection significantly contributing to death, revealed a spectrum of disease, certain signs of which appeared to be of predictive value as prognostic indices of survival and severity of the infection. Seven patients with transient fungemia experienced an acute episode of high spiking fever (greater than 102.5 degrees F), rigors and/or hypotension, six of whom improved after the intravenous catheter was removed, suggesting a catheter-related sepsis. In contrast, persistent low grade fever (less than 102.5 degrees F) characterized eight of the nine patients in whom T. glabrata infection was considered either potentially lethal, or contributing significantly to death. A deteriorating clinical course with organ failure was also associated with this latter category of patients. Catheter-induced specticemia was considered in only two patients in this category. The autopsy and clinical findings in this investigation as well as reported experimental studies suggest that T. glabrata is an organism of low virulence. The patients' underlying disease (e.g., neoplasia) and coexisting bacterial infection are the most important factors responsible for death.
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PMID:Torulopsis glabrata fungemia--a clinical pathological study. 57 9

A urinary tract infection with possible septicemia and endocarditis developed in a 36-year-old man. The illness was complicated by pulmonary embolism, thrombocytopenia, hematemesis, hepatic dysfunction, paralytic ileus and accelerated hypertension. The latter finding suggested pheochromocytoma. Treatment with antibiotics and phenoxybenzamine hydrochloride was associated with notable clinical improvement. A chromaffin cell tumor was surgically removed above the lift kidney. Conclusively, a pheochromocytoma may mimic and be present in association with infection.
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PMID:Infection and pheochromocytoma. 57 92


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