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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sequential chemotherapeutic regimens, primarily used in the treatment of hematopoietic malignancies, and employing ara-C as a basic antineoplastic agent induce mucosal alterations in the entire gastrointestinal tract. These are characterized by surface and glandular epithelial atypia, immaturity, and necrosis. Glandular regeneration is characteristically delayed leading to a state of intestinal aproliferative cytopenia. Other toxic intestinal changes include telangiectasia of blood vessels and the formation of intramural hematomas. Intestinal infections develop frequently and are complicated by
peritonitis
, liver abscesses, pneumatosis cystoides in testinalis and
sepsis
. These intestinal lesions are accompanied by a predictable clinical syndrome which begins concomitantly with ara-C infusions and is characterized by diarrhea, ileus, abdominal pain, hematemesis and melena, severe hypokalemia, hypocalcemia and a protein-losing enteropathy. Additional toxic manifestations induced by ara-C include transient weight gains, fever elevations and severe bone marrow depression. The genesis of the intestinal lesions is linked to the three day dose schedule of ara-C infusions which insures both arrest of the cycling intestinal cells in the S-phase and a high cytotoxic index. The severity of these lesions is markedly augmented by prior treatment with ara-C and cyclophosphamide which causes synchronization and probable recruitment of intestinal stem cells, respectively.
...
PMID:Cytosine arabinoside induced gastrointestinal toxic alterations in sequential chemotherapeutic protocols: a clinical-pathologic study of 33 patients. 70 32
Twenty-one children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome and minimal changes on renal biopsy were followed during all the disease. The average of follow-up was 37 months, with a range from 12 to 124 months. Recurrent proteinuria was the most important feature during the follow-up; 14 out of the patients showed frequent relapses, but only 2 patients showed major complication (
peritonitis
,
septicemia
) during relapses. Frequent relapses appeared most frequently in patients who began the disease before their fourth birthday, showed allergic history, had hypertension and red blood cells in urine, or had recurrent infections and finally, in those where proteinuria reappeared soon after prednisone therapy was ended. Prednisone alone was successful to induce remission, but it did not prevent frequent relapses. The association clorambucil-prednisone allowed lengthening of the period of remission and possibly for this reason the rate of relapses fell during the first 37 months of the follow-up. There are no signs which permit to predict the length of the disease and the frequent relapses can occur even after many years from the beginning of the disease. Special care of these patients avoids major complications.
...
PMID:[Longitudinal study in children with the nephrotic syndrome and minimal glomerular lesion]. 75 27
Stress ulcers are multiple, superficial erosions which occur mainly in the fundus and body of the stomach. They develop after shock,
sepsis
, and trauma and are ofter found in patients with
peritonitis
and other chronic medical illness. Stress ulcers should be differentiated from reactivation of chronic duodenal or gastric ulcers. Cushing's ulcer following head injury, or drug-induced gastritis. Digestive symptoms are usually absent, hemorrhage is the most common manifestation, and perforation and obstruction are rare. The presence of luminal acid and ischemia are necessary for the production of stress ulcer, while disruption of the gastric mucosal barrier by refluxed duodenal content may contribute to the pathogenesis. Endoscopy is the mainstay of the diagnostic procedure, and angiography should be used if endoscopy fails to identify the bleeding lesions. Medical management should include volume replacement, nasogastric aspiration, and the use of antacid. Selective intraarterial infusion of pitressin has shown encouraging preliminary results. Surgical treatment is reserved only for those patients who continue to bleed despite all medical management. The operation of choice is open to question. We prefer vagotomy, pyloroplasty, and oversewing the ulcers as an initial operation. Since the result of all forms of therapy has been poor, it seems resonable to try to prevent ulcer development. The use of vitamin A, hyperalimentation, and growth hormones is still in an experimental stage. Large clinical studies with case control are necessary before recommendations can be made. The use of potent and frequent antacid to buffer the gastric content has shown promising results; however, these observations need to be confirmed in a properly controlled and randomized study.
...
PMID:Stress ulcers: their pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment. 79 64
Pneumococcal pneumonia in two or more lobes in frail, elderly patients; staphylococcal and Gram-negative rod pneumonia in patients of any age; lung abscesses;
septicemia
; endocarditis;
peritonitis
; and meningitis are life-threatening infections. To save patients with these infections, the physician should know the causative organism and educate himself by cultures; estimate the whole body bacterial burden and decrease bacterial numbers by incision and drainage where large collections of pus are accessible; choose antibiotics with care and use two antibiotics if serious prognostic signs are present initially, if there is a change for the worse, or if the laboratory report indicates that multiple organisms are present; check the serum bactericidal level and repeat this test if the route of antibiotic administration is changed; watch for and treat underlying disease; and always monitor for septic shock. Aged patients need special care, as they often have severe underlying disease. The bacterial burden is often high before infection is recognized in elderly patients, and age itself interferes with host defenses.
...
PMID:Life-threatening infections: how to choose the right antibiotics. 84 91
We have reviewed the records of 48 patients who had colonic volvulus. Volvulus occurred in the sigmoid colon in 27 (56%) and in the right colon in 19 (40%). Volvulus elsewhere in the colon is rare, requiring unusual anatomic circumstances of a long mesentery and a mobile colon. The clinical history is characterized by a long history of bowel dysfunction followed by an episode of acute intestinal obstruction. The patient is often aged and is plagued by mental disorders and a number of degenerative diseases. Distention of the abdomen is the most significant finding, and tenderness may indicate
peritonitis
due to ischemic changes in the bowel. Three-positional films of the abdomen are most valuable, showing great distention of the colon and air-fluid levels in the bowel with regularity. Barium-enema studies will more accurately reveal the site and nature of obstruction. The barium-enema examination must be done carefully. It is omitted when
peritonitis
is present. Operative treatment is necessary for volvulus of the right colon. Non-operative reduction is effective for nonstrangulating volvulus of the sigmoid colon as an emergency procedure. Sigmoidoscopic examination and insertion of a long rubber tube will give dramatic relief to a substantial number of patients. Operative intervention is necessary when conservative measures fail. When gangrene is found at operation, exteriorization resection of the colon may be life-saving. Elective resections are recommended for patients who are in otherwise good health in order to prevent recurrences. The mortality rate in this series of 48 cases was 12.5 per cent. Cecal volvulus was present in each of the six patients who died.
Sepsis
and cardiopulmonary diseases were common in patients who died.
...
PMID:Volvulus of the colon. 86 92
The use of conservative pelvic surgery combined with intra- and postoperative antibiotic peritoneal lavage has been evaluated in 113 women with generalized
peritonitis
due to ruptured tuboovarian abscess. Mortality was 7.1% and hysterectomy was only required in 3% of cases. Hormonal and menstrual functions were retained in 73.5% and the potential for future pregnancy in 42.5%. Further surgery was required in 17.5% of the patients. These results are contrasted with recent series of comparable size in which the mortality and morbidity were similar but the frequency of hysterectomy ranged from 70--100%. It is concluded that hysterectomy is not necessary in the management of ruptured tuboovarian abscess if the major source of
sepsis
is removed and adequate peritoneal drainage is provided by the use of lavage.
...
PMID:Ruptured tuboovarian abscess. Is hysterectomy necessary? 90 55
Causes of death of 260 tumorous patients autopsied in 1974 were analyzed. Most common causes were inflammation and tumorous and non-tumorous organ insufficiencies; the others, in order of decreasing incidence, massive tumorous dissemination, infarct and haemorrhage. Pneumonia was predominating over the inflammatory causes although
peritonitis
and
sepsis
were also not rarely encountered. Death due to inflammation occurred most frequently in cases of myeloid-lymphoid, urogenital and gastro-intestinal tumours and in postoperative states. The incidence of insufficiencies due to tumorous or non-tumorous origin differed but slightly. Of the various organ insufficiencies, massive hepatic metastases, occlusion of the biliary duct and cardiac failure were the most common. In cases of tumors of the small pelvis, compression of the ureters led most often to death. Massive dissemination was observed most of all in breast and ovarian carcinomas. Myeloid-lymphoid tumors led to death through extensive organ infiltration in about one thirds of the cases. After hearth infarction, venous thrombosis was often followed by pulmonary embolism, however, coronary occlusion was also not rare. Death due to haemorrhage originated from acute or chronic ulcers of the gastrointestinal tract or from vascular invasion of tumors in the head and neck regions or from thrombocytopaenia induced by cytostatics.
...
PMID:[Causes of death in cancer patients]. 92 45
Although obese patients have been shown to represent a particularly high risk group with respect to hypoxemia both pre and postoperatively, no data exist to delineate the intraoperative arterial oxygenation pattern of these patients. Furthermore, no one has studied the effects of a change in operative position or a subdiaphragmatic laparotomy pack on arterial oxygenation (PaO2). Sixty-four adults undergoing jejunoileal bypass for morbid exogenous obesity, with a mean weight of 142.0 +/- 31.4 kg and a mean age of 33.3 +/- 10.4 years, were studied. Twenty-five patients (Group I) were maintained in the supine position throughout the operative procedure, while the remaining 39 patients (Group II) were changed to a 15 degrees head down position 15 minutes after a control blood sample was taken. Four additional markedly obese patients were studied to determine the effect of an abdominal pack of PaO2 values. The following findings were demonstrated: 1) 40% oxygen did not uniformly produce adequate arterial oxygenation for intra-abdominal surgery in otherwise healthy obese patients; 2) placement of a subdiaphragmatic abdominal laparotomy pack without a change in operative position resulted in a consistent fall in PaO2 in each patient to less than 65 mm Hg even though 40% oxygen was being administered; and 3) a change from supine to a 15 degrees head down operative position resulted in a significant (P less than 0.001) reduction in mean PaO2 (73.0 +/- 26.3 mm Hg). Seventy-seven per cent of these patients demonstrated PaO2 values of less than 80 mm Hg on 40% oxygen. Because of these findings, serious consideration should be given to the routine use of the Trendelenberg position intraoperatively in obese patients. However, if one elects this posture, prudence would dictate careful monitoring and maintenance of arterial oxygenation. Certainly, in obese patients, the intraoperative combination of the head down position and a subdiaphragmatic laparotomy pack should be avoided. In addition, since our data were collected in obese but otherwise healthy, young patients free of cardiorespiratory disease, special attention should be directed at the continuous measurement of arterial oxygenation in the older obese patient with either intrinsic dysfunction of vital organs (heart, lung, liver, kidney) or surgical disorders (
peritonitis
,
sepsis
).
...
PMID:Intraoperative arterial oxygenation in obese patients. 93 16
Twenty-three patients with acute
peritonitis
, intraabdominal abscess, wound infections (including infection of serious burns),
sepsis
accompanying renal transplantation, or urinary tract infection associated with cancer were treated with various dosage regimens of tobramycin, and their clinical responses were analysed. For the conditions studied, the optimal regimen was 3 mg/kg per day in three divided doses. No clinical effectiveness was noted in this study for doses of greater than or equal to 4 mg/kg per day.
...
PMID:Clinical use of tobramycin in patients with surgical infections due to gram-negative bacilli. 97 79
Twenty-nine patients, divided into three groups: 1) chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; 2) acute or chronic pulmonary disease with left heart failure; 3) respiratory insufficiency after
peritonitis
, pancreatitis, and/or
sepsis
, were studied during respirator treatment with regard to gas exchange, breathing mechanics and central circulation. The dead space ventilation was somewhat greater in group 1 than in the other groups. The alveolar-arterial oxygen tension difference was least in group 1, greater in group 2 and extremely high in group 3. Neither dynamic compliance of the thorax nor inspiratory resistance showed any significant differences between the groups. The cardiac output had the highest values in group 3. The venous admixture was generally small in group 1 and extremely large in group 3. The pulmonary artery pressures were highest in group 2. Three variables proved to be valuable when assessing the prognosis of a patient: a large venous admixture; a large alveolar-arterial oxygen tension difference, and a high pulmonary artery pressure indicated a less favourable prognosis.
...
PMID:Studies on pulmonary function in patients during respiratory treatment. Diagnostic and prognostic evaluations. 99 53
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