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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 1958-74 altogether 64 cases of bacteriologically verified infections of Listeria monocytogenes were diagnosed in Sweden in children, aged more than 27 days, and in adults. Immunosuppression predisposed to the disease. Thus, many patients had co-existing disorders, such as leukemia and alcoholism. Sixteen patients had been treated with corticosteroids, which were combined with cytostatic drugs in nine. Meningoencephalitis was diagnosed in 52 patients and was fatal in 16. The clinical symptoms did not differ from those in purulent meningitis caused by other bacteria. In the cerebrospinal fluid the cellular response was dominated by polymorphonuclear cells in 29 patients and by mononuclear cells in 20. Ten patients had
septicemia
, which was fatal in four. Clinical symptoms were dominated by chills, high fever and general prostration. One patient had
pleurisy
and one an abscess of the neck; both recovered. Serotypes 1 and 4b prevailed and were equally common. Many patients developed raised antibody titers in both the O-agglutination test and the complement fixation test. The titers were often not positive until after a month. Moderate granulocytosis was the rule and monocytosis was rarely seen. Ampicillin alone or combined with an aminoglycoside seemed to be the drug of choice in the treatment of listeriosis. An alternative drug was tetracycline. Most deaths occurred within six days of onset of the illness. Early diagnosis and treatment were imperative. Most patients recovered and serious sequelae were rare.
...
PMID:Clinical aspects on 64 cases of juvenile and adult listeriosis in Sweden. 10 52
Serogroup Y meningococci are more frequently respiratory pathogens than one might suppose from their prevalence in meningitis and
septicemia
. A case of a peracute fatal
septicemia
caused by group Y meningococci is reported here in which post mortem hemorrhagic lesions of the pharyngeal, laryngeal and tracheal mucosae as well as a beginning pneumonia and
pleurisy
have been found. The association of meningococcal and respiratory viral infections is discussed.
...
PMID:[Group Y meningococci as respiratory pathogens (author's transl)]. 18 6
Atypically developing chicken
septicemia
was studied at 3 farms in Bulgaria. In one of the observed centers of chicken
septicemia
infection no pathologic anatomical changes were evident while in the other two centers of infection serofibrinose and serofibrinose vitelline peritonitis, as well as
pleurisy
were present. In the bacteriological investigation carried out on 2969 samples 233 strains of chicken
septicemia
were isolated. Identification of 84 of them by the aid of the specific bacteriophage P. multocida 115 and of sugar and alcohol fermantation revealed that they can be classified as P. multocida. They are lyzated by a phage but do not reproduce it. Chicken
septicemia
cultures are virulent for white mice. In intramuscular injections of pullets these cultures prove not virulent, but their intravenous application kills the pullets in 5--10 days and the initial strain is isolated from all inner organs. The biological test on pullets is suitable for determining chicken
septicemia
culture virulence.
...
PMID:[Atypical course of cholera in poultry]. 54 40
Septicemic disease occurred in 49 of 126 pigs several days after being transported 80 km. All affected pigs died. The main changes in acutely affected pigs were skin discoloration, pulmonary edema, arthritis, meningitis, and renal glomerular thrombosis. In peracute cases, gross findings were minimal. Haemophilus parasuis was isolated from multiple organ sites in most affected pigs. Haemophilus parasuis was isolated from nasal swab specimens from 17 of 20 clinically normal pigs on the farm of origin. Fatal acute
septicemia
was reproduced in 2 pigs by intravenous or intratracheal exposure to an isolant of H parasuis obtained from 1 of of the 49 fatally affected pigs. Aerosol exposure of 5 pigs resulted in mild pneumonia in 4 pigs and severe pneumonia,
pleurisy
, pericarditis, and terminal
septicemia
in 1 pig.
...
PMID:Haemophilus parasuis infection in swine. 91 94
The electrocardiograms of 18 out of 21 patients hospitalized between 1964 and 1972 with purulent pericarditis presented significant changes. With the exception of three cases of primary isolated pericarditis, most of the patients presented with
septicemia
. Staphylococcus aureus was the predominant pathogen in 16 cases. Classical electrocardiographic evolution in four phases was recorded in six cases. Draining of the pericardial effusion in the patients without
pleurisy
was followed by low-voltage amelioration in half of the cases. The duration of the electrocardiographic changes was shorter in patients who underwent intrapericardial treatment. One quarter of the patients suffering from myopericarditis with conduction disturbances--Block AV 1, 2 and Wenckebach's periods--had a worse prognosis.
...
PMID:[Electrocardiogram changes in purulent pericarditis. Report on 21 cases]. 122 6
Three trials were conducted to establish if young primary specific pathogen free (SPF) pigs could be protected from Glasser's disease by vaccination. Three age groups of cesarean-derived isolator-reared gnotobiotic pigs were vaccinated twice at 4 and 6, 3 and 5, and 2 and 4 wk of age respectively with a formalin killed aluminum hydroxide adsorbed bacterin prepared from three strains of Haemophilus parasuis isolated from Ontario pigs affected with Glasser's disease. When challenged two weeks later with the homologous strains of virulent bacteria, all the vaccinated pigs remained healthy, while 17/18 nonvaccinated pigs became severely sick or died between three and seven days postchallenge. The one surviving nonimmunized pig was retarded in growth. All of the nonimmunized pigs had visible lesions of polyserositis, the most common being polyarthritis (14/18). Other lesions were fibrinous meningitis, pericarditis,
pleurisy
and/or peritonitis. Two of the pigs died with a
septicemia
. Haemophilus parasuis was isolated from 15/18 nonimmunized pigs, usually from several of the affected sites. The organisms were not isolated from the immunized pigs, nor from the surviving nonimmunized pig. Attempts to detect the presence of specific antibodies against the H. parasuis strains in the sera of the immunized or exposed pigs by the passive hemagglutination test or by enzyme linked immunoassay were unsuccessful. The results of this work indicate that primary SPF pigs can be protected from Glasser's disease by vaccination as early as 2 and 4 wk of age. The nature of this protective mechanism was not established in this study.
...
PMID:Vaccination of gnotobiotic primary specific pathogen-free pigs against Haemophilus parasuis. 183 78
The association of changes in antimicrobial therapy with length of stay and total hospital charges in a 600-bed general medical hospital was studied. Changes in antimicrobial regimens were examined in three diagnosis-related groups (DRGs): DRG 79 (respiratory infections and inflammations, age greater than 69 years, and/or secondary diagnosis), DRG 89 (simple pneumonia and
pleurisy
, age greater than 69 years, and/or secondary diagnosis), and DRG 416 (
septicemia
, age greater than 17 years). These changes were defined as follows: (1) switching from one drug or drug combination to another, (2) adding one or more drugs to a regimen, or (3) discontinuing one drug of a multiple-drug regimen. Variables examined for association with these changes were length of hospital stay and pharmacy, antimicrobial, intravenous therapy, and hospital charges. In DRGs 79 and 89, changes in antimicrobial regimens were associated with significantly longer hospital stay and significantly higher pharmacy, antimicrobial, intravenous therapy, and total hospital charges. In DRG 416, changes in antimicrobial regimens were not associated with higher charges or longer stay. Significant differences among DRGs were found with respect to the types of changes, with more changes from broad- to narrow-spectrum coverage occurring in DRGs 89 and 416 than in DRG 79. At this institution, patients whose antimicrobial regimens were changed had significantly longer hospital stays and higher charges in two of three DRGs.
...
PMID:Association of length of stay and total hospital charges with antimicrobial regimen changes. 313 38
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is the most common of the connective tissue disorders and can involve virtually any organ in the body. It is associated with pleuropulmonary manifestations in well over 50% of cases.
Pleuritis
with or without pleural effusion is the most common manifestation and can be particularly troublesome to manage but is rarely life-threatening. More serious manifestations in the lung include acute lupus pneumonitis with or without alveolar haemorrhage, chronic lupus pneumonitis and pulmonary hypertension. These all contribute significantly to overall mortality in SLE. The association between SLE and the antiphospholipid syndrome, leading to venous thrombosis and pulmonary embolism, is well recognized. Up to 20% of all cases of SLE present in childhood and many of these have pulmonary features at presentation or during the course of their illness.
Sepsis
is one of the main causes of death in SLE and pulmonary
sepsis
in these often immunocompromised patients contributes a significant proportion. Several drugs can produce a clinical syndrome that has many of the clinical and immunological features of SLE.
Pleuritis
may be seen in up to half of these cases of drug induced SLE. The development of SLE and conditions such as sarcoidosis or asbestosis in the same patient may represent a simple coincidence but there is some evidence for a closer association between these disorders.
...
PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus. 851 77
The clinical presentation, course and outcome of Yersinia enterocolitica infection was studied prospectively in 125 children. Enteric forms occurred in 114 children (92 enteritis, 20 pseudoappendicitis, 2 chronic ileitis), of whom 17 also had extramesenteric manifestations; 11 children had one or more extramesenteric forms without enteric disease. Enteritis occurred more frequently in young children whereas serious forms and extramesenteric forms were more common in children older than 6 years of age (P < 0.001). Arthritis was observed in 13 children and extensive lymphadenopathy in 11; 1 child had
septicemia
with
pleurisy
, 1 had vasculitis, 1 had cholecystitis and 4 had erythema nodosum. Diagnosis was established by positive culture in 100 (80%) children and by agglutinin test in 11 of 45 (24%), demonstration of circulating specific anti-IgA and anti-IgG to Yersinia outer membrane proteins in 47 of 48 (98%) and detection of antigen in biopsies in 28 of 33 (85%) children. The 2 latter methods were superior to the agglutinin test. Serotype O3 and O9 predominated. The frequency and seriousness of complications may justify the use of antibiotics for Yersinia enteritis in children 6 years of age or older.
...
PMID:Yersinia enterocolitica infection in children. 855 26
In the last years the criteria of operability have been extended to elderly patients with hepato-pancreatic-biliary diseases. We selected 46 patients (in the seventies or older, class 3 or 4 of ASA score, affected by hepato-pancreatic-biliary neoplasms) in order to evaluate the behavior of these patients undergoing to different anaesthesiological techniques. Randomly, we treated 24 patients (group A) in general anaesthesia, and 22 patients (group B) in peridural anaesthesia. We considered mortality rate, morbidity rate, as
sepsis
, wound infection, pleuritis, and pneumonias. The data were analyzed by chi2-test and Fisher's exact test (p < 0.05). Mortality rate was similar in the two groups (A = 4.1, B = 4.5) (p = ns), and no complications were determined by the different anesthesiologic procedures.
Pleuritis
was present in 44% of group A vs 45% of group B (p = ns). Atelectasis areas were present in 58% of group A vs 27% of group B (p = ns), pneumonia was present in 33% of group A vs 9% of group B: this value was significant (p = 0.049). There were no differences between the two groups regarding wound infection rate (only one case in group B). We think that pulmonary diseases can be determined by intubation and mechanical ventilation. We show a significant reduction of pneumonia in the patients that underwent peridural anaesthesia. For this reason, peridural technique can be safely extended to elderly patients with hepato-pancreatic-biliary diseases.
...
PMID:[Hepatobiliopancreatic surgery in patients over 70 years old: which anesthesia?]. 900 31
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