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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The removal of 720 impacted mandibular third molars in the presence of acute pericoronitis, employing as atraumatic an operative technique as possible, did not give rise to serious complications, such as
osteomyelitis
, brain abscess,
septicemia
or facial space abscess. The results have been compared with a control group of 1,000 impacted mandibular third molars extracted without presence of acute infection.
...
PMID:Extractions of impacted mandibular wisdom teeth in the presence of acute infection. 10 53
The use of counterimmunoelectrophoresis (CIE) for detection of serum antibodies to staphylococcal teichoic acids was evaluated against teichoic acids prepared by sonic treatment or lysostaphin extraction of Staphylococcus aureus (Lafferty strain). Of 54 patient sera from suspected cases of staphylococcal endocarditis,
osteomyelitis
, or
septicemia
, 33 (61.1%) were positive by CIE analysis; however, 128 of 291 sera (44.0%) from normal adult donors were also positive. Selected CIE-positive sera from patient and control groups were titered by Ouchterlony gel diffusion. In the control group of normal sera, 65% were also positive by gel diffusion, but only 15% had titers of >/=1:2. Of the patient sera, 44.4% had gel diffusion titers of >/=1:2. In addition to the specific teichoic acid band, a second precipitation band could be demonstrated with both patient or normal sera by CIE or gel diffusion. This second precipitin band was shown to involve interactions of test sera with staphylococcal protein A present in the teichoic acid extracts. The protein A precipitins were detected at high concentrations of the antigen extracts, whereas the anti-teichoic acid precipitins were optimally detected at lower antigen concentrations. The formation of protein A precipitin bands did not correlate with the presence of anti-teichoic acid antibodies, as most sera tested were positive for protein A regardless of anti-teichoic acid activity. This study suggests that a high incidence of normal people have levels of antibodies to teichoic acids which are detectable by the highly sensitive, but nonspecific, technique of CIE.
...
PMID:Counterimmunoelectrophoretic detection of a high incidence of precipitin reactions in normal human sera against staphylococcal teichoic acids and protein A. 10 90
Sixty-nine cases of
Osteomyelitis
, and 27 of septic arthritis have been presented. 69/96 (71%) were children below 12. The sites frequently involved were tibia, femur and humerus. Septic arthritis commonly involved the knee. The commonest organism was Penicillin - resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Though we sought but failed to establish that overt clinical malnutrition was aetiologically important, since 54% were well-fed children, the virulence of the
sepsis
in which an entire bone shaft may die is disturbing but unexplained. Whereas arthrotomy plus antibiotics gave uniformly good results for septic arthritis, in
osteomyelitis
, no single treatment regime was outstanding. We would recommend the tetracyclines, (eg. "Reverin"), in addition to appropriate surgery, as a routine.
...
PMID:A clinical study of Osteomyelitis and septic arthritis. 26 74
Data on the hospital incidence of acute haematogenous
osteomyelitis
in New Zealand children between 1965 and 1973 are presented. The incidence in Maori children is four times that in European children. The condition is more common in the North Island than the South Island, but this difference is mainly due to the distribution of the Maori people. Admissions to hospital are common in late summer and autumn. The relationship of
osteomyelitis
to skin and ear
sepsis
and some possible reasons for ethnic difference, are discussed.
...
PMID:Racial and environmental factors in acute haematogenous osteomyelitis in New Zealand. 29 Sep 20
Pneumonia is one of the most serious infections in the neonate and is responsible for a large percentage of neonatal mortality. Pneumonia in a premature or term infant who is debilitated by an underlying problem such as hyaline membrane disease carries an extremely high morbidity and mortality. Since most of the bacterial pneumonias are treatable, early recognition and diagnosis and vigorous treatment are essential. X-ray findings, though helpful, serve only as a guideline. Prognosis is adversely affected if pneumonia results in generalized
sepsis
, leading to meningitis, disseminated intravascular coagulation, and
osteomyelitis
. Prompt antibiotic treatment should be begun before the etiologic agent or drug susceptibility is known.
...
PMID:Acute pneumonia in the newborn: changing picture. 32 96
The longterm prognosis of neonatal
septicemia
during the first four weeks of life has been estimated. Of 90 infants with the diagnosis of neonatal
septicemia
during a five-year period, 1969--1973, 65 infants survived the initial treatment. Another two infants died with complications of their main disease, intestinal atresia, at the age of two months. Thus the total mortality in neonatal
septicemia
in this series was 30%. The remaining 63 children have been investigated between ages of 2 1/2 and 6 1/2 years. Of these 63 children we have found 14 children (22% of the surviving) with handicaps where the
septicemia
can be regarded as a possible cause of the handicap. Of these 14 children only six had an "uncomplicated"
septicemia
while four of them had meningitis and four had
osteomyelitis
. Furthermore, of the 14 handicapped children nine were delivered preterm (28--36 weeks) and all of them had one or more additional neonatal diagnoses than
septicemia
. The prognosis, both immediate and longterm, of neonatal
septicemia
in the present series compares favourably to most international studies. The importance of early detection together with an aggresive treatment of the
septicemia
is stressed and is considered as the main reason for the good prognosis.
...
PMID:Longterm follow-up of neonatal septicemia. 36 3
In a 20-day-old female infant, bacteremia,
osteomyelitis
, and pyogenic arthritis developed due to infection with group B streptococcus, type Ic. She had an unusual clinical presentation with overwhelming
sepsis
and acute congestive heart failure.
...
PMID:Group B streptococcal sepsis with osteomyelitis and arthritis. Its occurrence with acute heart failure. 38 36
Malignant external otitis is an infection which begins in the external auditory canal. It is uniformly caused by the Gram negative Pseudomonas aeruginosa organism and mainly affects elderly diabetics. It spreads to the soft tissues beneath the temporal bone and, if not properly treated leads to facial nerve palsy, mastoiditis,
sepsis
,
osteomyelitis
of the base of the skull, sigmoid sinus thrombosis, multiple cranial nerve palsies and death. Experience with 72 patients in varying stages of the disease is summarized. Stressed are the diagnostic criteria of nonresponsiveness to the usual methods of treatment, continued suppuration, and the continuing reformation of granulation tissue in the floor of the external auditory canal. Medical treatment is recommended with hospitalization and intravenous carbenicillin and gentamicin. Minor surgical debridement is helpful. All patients should be treated medically for as long as improvement continues, reserving surgical intervention only in the event a plateau is reached or symptoms and signs become worse under treatment. With or without a major surgical procedure, it is imperative to continue treatment for at least seven days after apparent cure in order to avoid recurrent disease possibly at a site distant from the canal.
...
PMID:Malignant external otitis: further considerations. 40 26
A retrospective study of serious non-wound infectious complications in general surgery during at 14-month period is reported. A prospective study on wound infections in available from the same institution and period.
Septicemia
, intraabdominal and intrathoracal abscesses and rare cases of
osteomyelitis
occurred in 1.3% of all treated patients, whereas postoperative wound infection developed in 7.5% of primarily non-infected patients. Mortality was significantly higher among patients with serious infections than in all patients nursed during the same period. Severe postoperative infectious complications was in fact the third most common cause of death and accounted for 14% of the mortality of the clinic. This rate rises to close to 50% when death from incurable disease is excluded.
Septicemia
carried a significantly higher mortality rate than intraabdominal abscesses. The risk of a serious infection developing was significantly higher in operations on the small or large intestine than after appendectomies or biliary operations. Gram negative bacteria dominated, especially in cases with a fatal outcome. Contributing factors such as malignancy, preoperative infection or macroscopic peroperative wound soiling, were more common in patients where a serious infectious complication developed postoperatively.
...
PMID:A 14-month study of severe non-wound infectious complications in general surgery. 40 15
Ceforanide, a new cephalosporin antibiotic with a long half-life (3 h), can be administered twice daily. We evaluated its antimicrobial activity, pharmacology, and clinical efficacy. Twenty-seven patients with infections due to susceptible organisms received ceforanide, 0.5, 1, or 2 g, intramuscularly or intravenously every 12 h for 6 to 28 days. In vitro studies with the clinical isolates from 27 patients treated plus 263 additional isolates showed that ceforanide was active against cephalothin-susceptible gram-positive and gram-negative microorganisms. In addition, ceforanide inhibited 65% of cephalothin-resistant Escherichia coli and 65% of Enterobacter spp. at </=12.5 mug/ml. After a single 1-g intramuscular dose, the mean peak plasma concentration at 1 h was 48.9 mug/ml and that at 12 h was 4.7 mug/ml. Plasma accumulation occurred in some patients. The infections included 10 pneumonias, 3 with bacteremia and 1 with empyema; 11 soft tissue infections, 4 with abscesses and 3 with
sepsis
; and 3 urinary tract infections. One case each of endocarditis,
osteomyelitis
, and septic thrombophlebitis, all due to Staphylococcus aureus, were treated. Clinical response was satisfactory in all patients; bacteriological response was satisfactory in 26 of 27 patients. Ceforanide was well tolerated. Three patients developed mild increases in liver enzymes, and one developed slight eosinophilia. In another case, the antibiotic was discontinued because of a fivefold rise in serum glutamic-oxalacetic transaminase (aspartate aminotransferase) and serum glutamic-pyruvic transaminase (alanine aminotransferase) and a twofold rise in lactic acid dehydrogenase and alkaline phosphatase.
...
PMID:Ceforanide: in vitro and clinical evaluation. 50 95
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