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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Five patients received overdoses of vincristine ranging from 3.5 to 32 mg. Neurotoxicity accounted for most of the complications observed. Peripheral neuropathies, cranial nerve palsies,
paralytic ileus
, atony of the bladder, hypertension, hypotension, seizures, inappropriate ADH secretion, and severe bone marrow depression were all encountered. Two patients died within 72 hours of the overdose. Another patient died of
sepsis
22 days after the overdose. Two patients recovered and were discharged. The three patients who survived longer than a few days showed improvement in the vincristine-induced neuropathy, and the two long-term survivors had essentially complete recovery. It appears that if a patient can be supported through the critical period following an overdose, he can be expected to recover normal neurologic function.
...
PMID:Overdosage with vincristine. 18 48
Complications are the major causes of illness and death after burning and most of them stem from the burn wound. Their origin and importance are reviewed with emphasis on problems and growing points in knowledge. Fluid leakage from the circulation into the burn is the cause of hypovolemic shock, but the underlying permeability changes in the burn are only partly understood. Other nonbacterial complications include acute cardiac failure, acute anemia, hemolytic jaundice, renal failure, encephalopathy, complex hypermetabolic effects including pseudodiabetes, gastric and duodenal ulceration, deep vein thrombosis and pulmonary embolism, pulmonary and glomerular microthrombosis, hepatic jaundice, and arterial thrombosis. Involvement of the airway in conflagrations carries special hazards like glottic edema and inhalation of irritant fumes. Nowadays, bacterial causes are dominant and these remain the main challenge. Bacterial infection and invasion of the burn are usually responsible for
septicemia
, bronchopneumonia, and pyelonephritis although other sources also contribute. Indirect manifestations of
septicemia
include
paralytic ileus
, acute gastric dilatation, toxic myocarditis, and some cases of renal failure. Therapeutic complications like agranulocytosis, thrombocytopenia, and colitis occur at times. High concentrations of oxygen given therapeutically can produce fatal aseptic hypoxic pneumonitis.
...
PMID:A review of the complications of burns, their origin and importance for illness and death. 44 73
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.
...
PMID:Infection and pheochromocytoma. 57 92
Fourteen cases of intestinal pneumotosis were found in a review of 1 477 plain abdomen X-ray films taken because of different conditions. These 14 cases were associated in most instances with
septicemia
, gastroenteritis and
paralytic ileus
. The mortality was high. The treatment should be directed to the management of the primary condition: intestinal pneumatosis,
septicemia
, gastroenteritis,
paralytic ileus
.
...
PMID:[Intestinal pneumatosis]. 87 30
Surgical correction is the treatment of choice for urinary fistulas. However, there are circumstances that advise against the use of this approach, basically when patient general condition is poor or life expectancy short; i. e., in the presence of an underlying malignant pelvic disease. In these cases, urinary diversion by percutaneous nephrostomy will suffice, although
sepsis
or derangement of electrolyte balance may sometimes develop due to the fistulous defect. Occlusion of the pyelo-ureteric junction and percutaneous drainage is a solution that causes no major complications. Two patients who could not be submitted to conventional surgery were treated by the foregoing procedure. Both patients have been followed for more than two years. The first case was a male who had undergone abdominoperineal resection due to carcinoma of the sigmoid colon. He developed stress ulcers, pulmonary thromboembolism,
sepsis
,
paralytic ileus
and bilateral ureteral fistula. The second case was an insulin-dependent female diabetic who had previously received radiotherapy to the pelvis. She developed a large vesicocutaneous fistula and public osteomyelitis after drainage of an inguinal abscess. Patient tolerance was good and no major complications were observed. In our view this palliative procedure should be considered in the management of patients with urinary fistula whose life expectancy is short. Its application can be extended to patients with inoperable carcinoma of the bladder or prostate and important symptoms.
...
PMID:[Ureteral tamponade in the treatment of urinary fistula: our experience]. 144 12
The effectiveness of intraperitoneal drain was studied on patients undergoing appendicectomy for perforated appendicitis. Randomly 40 patients were allocated with drainage by corrugated rubber drains and 46 patients were without drainage. There were 5 deaths in the series, out of which 4 (10%) were in the drainage group and one (2.2%) in the group without drainage. The incidences of major wound
sepsis
,
paralytic ileus
, intraperitoneal abscess and urinary infection were observed in 55%, 42.5%, 12.5% and 15% respectively in drainage group and 50%, 28.3%, 21.7% and 15.2% respectively in non-drainage group. Occurrence of subphrenic abscess (7.5%), burst abdomen (5%) and faecal fistula (5%) were confined to drainage group only.
...
PMID:A perforated appendix: should we drain? 152 3
In Venezuela, Strongyloides stercoralis is an endemic parasite, but scarce information exists about systemic strongyloidiasis, an opportunistic infection that generally occurs in immunosuppressed patients, especially in those with a defect in cell-mediated immunity. The symptomatology of systemic strongyloidiasis is variable. The syndrome is characterized mostly by gastrointestinal and respiratory symptoms.
Paralytic ileus
and acute respiratory insufficiency can be prominent.
Sepsis
and meningitis are frequent. The diagnosis can be made by examination of feces, duodenal or jejunal aspirates and sputum. Larvae can also be identified in peritoneal fluid, pleural fluid, lymph nodes, urine specimens and cerebrospinal fluid. Thiabendazole, at standard doses, during at least five to seven days is satisfactory if administered promptly. It is necessary to rule out this parasitoses in patients at risk to avoid fatal outcomes.
...
PMID:[Systemic strongyloidiasis. Review]. 181 76
Between the years 1977 to 1990, ten patients were operated for ileus due to intestinal damage induced by radiotherapy. The patients had received an average radiation dose of 50.2 GY. Average lapse of time between radiotherapy and operation for ileus was 15.5 months. The operation procedures included were five lysis of adhesions, four by-pass operations, three small intestine resections, one large intestine resection, three transversostomies and one ileostomy. Three patients suffered postoperative complications; one got bronchopneumonia, one suffered prolonged
paralytic ileus
and one suffered anastomotic leakage,
sepsis
and fistula formation. Five of the patients have died from their malignant illness. For the five remaining patients the observation time varies from six months to 13 years.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of ileus in the radiation-injured intestine]. 194
Nutrition in acute spinal cord injury is complicated. Not every aspect of nutrition as it relates to the acutely injured spinal cord patient is known. The stress response to injury, fever, infection,
sepsis
, and surgery alter nutritional needs, as does the spinal cord injury itself. The sequelae of spinal cord injury, including denervation atrophy and paralysis, glucose intolerance, skin and wound breakdown, poikilothermy, anemia, respiratory paralysis, pneumonia,
paralytic ileus
, gastrointestinal ulcers and hemorrhage, neurogenic bowel and bladder, and depression, all affect the nutritional needs of the patient. Orthopedic appliances, pharmacologic agents, and other injuries can also alter nutritional requirements. Nutritional assessment in acute spinal cord injury is also complex. It should include medical and diet history, physical examination, intake and output measurements, prediction of energy expenditure and protein requirements, or--even better--measurements of energy expenditure with indirect methodology, using the metabolic cart or pulmonary artery catheter. Application of computerized tomography and radioisotope studies may prove valuable in the future. Finally, the direct relationship between nutrition and physiologic alterations of acute spinal cord injury necessitates that the critical care nurse incorporate nutrition-focused thinking into many aspects of the acute spinal cord--injured patient's care.
...
PMID:Nutrition in acute spinal cord injury. 226 60
Patients requiring feeding gastrostomies are often poor risks for either laparotomy or general anesthesia. Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy can be performed at the bedside by a surgeon-endoscopist and with minimal sedation. The authors performed this procedure on 45 patients ranging in age from 17 to 88 years. The procedure was indicated for neurologic disorders in 34 patients, head and neck tumours in 2, failure to thrive in 4, esophageal obstruction from lung cancer in 1 and tracheostomy for multisystem failure or trauma and
sepsis
in 4. In three cases the procedure could not be performed because the stomach could not be intubated. In 29 cases local anesthesia and sedation (diazepam and meperidine) were used, but in 16 cases general anesthesia with hyperventilation was preferred. The mean operative time was 32 minutes, decreasing with experience so that the current mean operative time for the last nine cases was 23 minutes. Feeding was begun on day 1 after operation in most patients and on day 2 in others. Complications included tube displacement in three patients, superficial infection at the site of the tube insertion in three (not requiring drainage or tube removal) and asymptomatic pneumoperitoneum in one patient. These complications all occurred early in the series. No patient suffered
paralytic ileus
, vomiting, aspiration or significant leaking around the tube. In the authors' opinion percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy is the preferred method for placement of a feeding gastrostomy. It can be performed rapidly with minimal stress in high-risk patients.
...
PMID:Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy: indications and results. 309 37
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