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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Unilateral thalamic bleeding with associated intraventricular hemorrhage is reported in three full-term neonates. The first presented within 48 hours from birth with early onset streptococcal meningitis, persistent pulmonary hypertension, tonic seizures and a tense fontanelle. The second presented 6 days after birth with irritability, opisthotonus, a tense fontanelle and tonic seizures. The third was admitted three days after birth with seizures and a tense fontanelle. In the latter two infants NMR and CT imaging documented thrombosed superficial and deep cerebral veins. The etiopathogenesis of intracranial venous thrombosis in the neonate is diverse: asphyxia, dehydration, polycythemia, sepsis-meningitis and difficult delivery are the main causes. In one of our patients jugular vein compression by the collar of a negative-pressure ventilation chamber probably initiated the intracranial events. More than half of the survivors sustain severe neurological impairment.
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PMID:Deep cerebral venous thrombosis in thalamo-ventricular hemorrhage of the term newborn. 150 40

Diabetes in pregnant Mexican-American women is a serious and expensive health problem. At the University of California, San Diego Medical Center, 44% of pregnant women are Mexican American. In the Diabetes in Pregnancy Clinic, only 7% of women with insulin-dependent diabetes are in this ethnic group compared with 66% of non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients and 51% of those with gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM). GDM is the most common complication of pregnancy in Mexican Americans with a prevalence approximately three times higher than that of whites (4.5 vs. 1.5%). Mexican-American obese GDM subjects had more frequent cesarean sections and were more likely to have complications of premature rupture of membranes and preterm labor (NS). Polycythemia and sepsis also occurred more often in their infants. Anthropometric measurements in infants of both lean and obese GDM subjects differed from those of infants of mothers without GDM. Infants of lean mothers with GDM were heavier and longer than those of lean mothers without GDM. In addition, they had increased waist-hip ratio and triceps and subscapular skin folds. Infants of obese mothers with GDM were heavier than those of lean mothers with GDM. Moreover, they were longer (P less than 0.04); had a higher body mass index (P less than 0.04); and larger waist and hip circumferences (P less than 0.03) and buccal (P less than 0.01), subscapular (P less than 0.01), and sum of skin-fold measurements (P less than 0.03). Our observations indicate that pregnant diabetic Mexican-American women have predominantly GDM and non-insulin-dependent diabetes. They represent a major public health problem because of increased maternal and neonatal morbidity.
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PMID:Diabetes in pregnancy in Mexican Americans. 191 21

Infants with platelet counts below 100,000/mm3 should be evaluated for the cause of the thrombocytopenia. A maternal history to determine previous illnesses and particularly thrombocytopenia, drugs taken, and perinatal complications is important, and a maternal platelet count must be obtained. Physical examination of the infant is revealing in the TAR and giant cavernous hemangioma syndromes and may suggest intrauterine infection. A complete blood cell count (CBC) should be done to look for associated anemia and neutropenia or for polycythemia. Red cell morphology may be helpful. A bone marrow examination may be necessary if the etiology is unclear after the initial studies are done. Investigation of the well child will usually find an etiology for the thrombocytopenia. It is important to consider and test for isoimmune thrombocytopenia and intrauterine infection. In the ill infant multiple factors may contribute to a low platelet count, and a single, precise etiology often cannot be established. Thrombocytopenia with or without DIC may be an important indicator of sepsis. Platelet transfusions are helpful if the thrombocytopenia is due to decreased production or intrinsic platelet defects. In disorders with increased platelet destruction, donor platelets may survive long enough to be of some benefit. In ill infants treatment of the underlying problem often results in resolution of the thrombocytopenia. Transfusions should be used for the bleeding child and for the infant with severe thrombocytopenia who is the product of a vaginal delivery. In addition to being therapeutic, platelet transfusions may also assist in diagnosis.
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PMID:Thrombocytopenia in the newborn. 635 31

Oneself presents the result of the prospective study from evaluate the morbility of the partial exchange-transfusion (exchange-dilution) to effect in two forms in newborn with polycythemia. The A group was newborn in the which extraction of blood volume was on peripheric vein is oneself administration crystalloid solution for another periphery vein; the B group was utilized umbilical vein to remove blood volume for another periphery vein is administration the crystalloid. To have 20 newborn in each group; to predisponent prenatal factors global were toxemic (12%); the plethora was the more frequent sing (55%) and nausea in (37%). Were not encountered difference in both groups for: gestational age, weight, birth rate, trophism, polycythemia type (asymptomatic vs symptomatic); neither to have difference in the seric electrolytes, protein and vital signs before and after procedure. Were encountered more infections process in the B group (P < 0.05). Were concluded what the exchange-dilution for polycythemia in newborn of term must be for periphery vein exclusive with security of not production metabolic and hemodynamic changes and without risk for sepsis and/or enterocolitis for manipulation of umbilical vessels.
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PMID:[Comparison of 2 methods of partial exchange transfusion in newborns with polycythemia: peripheral-peripheral and central-peripheral]. 837 43

Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency is prevalent in Thailand. This condition can cause acute hemolysis during oxidative stress and also severe hyperbilirubinemia in the newborn in some populations. Our aim was to study the prevalence of G6PD deficiency in relation to neonatal jaundice. We performed quantitative red blood cell (RBC) G6PD assay in the cord blood of 505 male subjects. Observation of jaundice and determination of bilirubin level as well as work up for other causes of jaundice were made in the G6PD deficiency group compared to a G6PD normal group. Questionnaires were also sent for further follow up to both groups. The results of the study were as follows: Sixty-one of 505 male (12.08%) had RBC G6PD deficiency (Group I). The rest (444 cases) had normal G6PD (Group II). In Group I, 49.15% developed neonatal jaundice, of which 28.82% were physiologic and 20.33% were pathologic jaundice. In group II, 23.68% developed jaundice; 16.51% were physiologic and 7.17% were pathologic jaundice, respectively. Onset of jaundice, date of peak bilirubin and peak bilirubin level in Group I and Group II were not statistically different. ABO incompatibility was associated with Group I in 17.24% and with Group II in 9.09%. Hospitalization day in Groups I and II were not statistically different. Other associated diseases were found in both groups, ie infection, congenital malformation, respiratory distress syndrome, but there was no significant difference in terms of jaundice. Phototherapy was required in 18.64% and 10.28% in Group I and II with a duration of 3.91 +/- 1.24 and 3.21 +/- 1.75 days, respectively. One case in Group I who was also premature received one exchange blood transfusion due to severe sepsis but he did not survive. One case in Group II who had polycythemia was successfully treated by partial exchange transfusion with plasma.
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PMID:Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency in the newborn: its prevalence and relation to neonatal jaundice. 862 93

Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is responsible for substantial infant morbidity and mortality. NEC has been hypothesized to result from hypoxemia and mucosal injury, aggravated by feeding and bacterial proliferation. A study conducted at Kasturba Hospital Manipal in Karnataka, India, during 1990-94 attempted to further define risk factors for NEC. The 34 infants with NEC represented 1.38% of total admissions to the hospital's Neonatal Intensive Care Unit during the study period. The mean birth weight of NEC infants was 1584.56 g, with a mean gestational age of 33.53 weeks. 28 infants (82.35%) were preterm and 33 (97.05%) weighed under 2500 g. The most frequent clinic signs in infants with NEC were abdominal distension (79.4%), hyperbilirubinemia (67.6%), hypoglycemia (58.8%), and umbilical erythema (55.9%). When the 23 infants with NEC born within the hospital were compared with 46 weight-matched controls, there were no significant differences in birth weight, gestational age, or feeding patterns. However, NEC cases had a higher frequency of pregnancy-induced hypertension, low mean Apgar scores, polycythemia, hypothermia, and septicemia than controls. These findings suggest that poor gut blood flow may be another important etiologic factor in NEC.
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PMID:Neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis. 925 Dec 79

Polycythemia--characterized by an excessive number of erythrocytes--is a rare disease in the dog with a chronic progressive course and unspecific symptoms. There are several forms: a primary, a secondary adequate or a secondary inadequate polycythemia. The clinical workup is done step by step and after stabilization of critical patients, the remaining therapy must address the primary cause. We report on a five year old male Leonberger dog suffering from secondary, inadequate polycythemia. He was presented with apathy, gait disturbances and disorientation. On the basis of the diagnostic workup a pathological process in the kidneys was postulated. Initially focal seizures became generalized later, most probably because of formation of a forebrain thrombus with secondary hypoxia. Even after emergency treatment the general state deteriorated. The course indicated possible sepsis. Because of the critical picture with secondary complications and the poor prognosis, the dog was euthanised. The histopathological results showed T-cell renal lymphoma and secondary injury to the forebrain.
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PMID:[Convulsions in relation to polycythemia: literature review and case description]. 952 46

Thrombotic disease is rare in neonates. The main risk factors at this age are perinatal asphyxia, maternal diabetes, sepsis, polycythemia, dehydration, a low cardiac output, and in primis the catheterization of central lines. Another important risk factor is inherited thrombophilia. Arterial thrombosis is even more rare than venous thrombosis and less related to most of the risk factors listed above; it occurs more frequently in the iliac, femoral, and cerebral arteries but very rarely in the aorta. Most of the described cases of aortic thrombosis are associated with the catheterization of an umbilical artery and involve the descending tract and the renal arteries; very few relate to the ascending tract and the aortic arch. The possible role of virus-induced primary vascular endothelium damage in the etiopathogenesis of neonatal arterial thrombosis has been previously hypothesized. Herpesviruses, particularly human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), can infect endothelial cells and directly damage intact vascular endothelium, altering its thromboresistant surface as a result of procoagulant activity mediated by specific viral surface phospholipids, necessary for the coagulation enzyme complex assembly that leads to thrombin generation. We describe a case of congenital aortic arch thrombosis. The clinical, laboratory, and virologic pictures; the anatomopathologic findings (fully compatible with viral infection); the detection of HCMV in various tissues (including the aorta); and the absence of other causes of aortic thrombosis make it possible to attribute the case to a severe congenital HCMV infection with multiple organ involvement, after the primary infection of the mother. The hemostatic system disorders and hemodynamic disturbances related to viral cardiac damage explain the clinical features of the case and indicate that congenital HCMV infection should be included among the causes of neonatal aortic thrombosis.
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PMID:Neonatal aortic arch thrombosis as a result of congenital cytomegalovirus infection. 1173 41

In neonates and infants numerous clinical and environmental conditions such as the use of central lines, cardiac diseases and polycythemia, renal diseases such as congenital nephrotic syndrome and neonatal hemolytic uremic syndrome, peripartal asphyxia, infants of diabetic mothers, dehydration, septicemia, necrotizing enterocolitis, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation lead to elevated thrombin generation and subsequent thrombus formation. Genetic prothrombotic defects [protein C, protein S and antithrombin deficiency, mutations of coagulation factor V and factor II, elevated lipoprotein (a)] have been established as risk factors for thromboembolic events. The interpretation of laboratory results relies on age-dependent normal reference values. Because appropriate clinical trials are missing in these age groups, treatment recommendations are adapted from small-scale studies in neonates and infants and from guidelines relating to adult patient protocols. Secondary long-term anticoagulation should be administered on an individual basis.
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PMID:Neonatal thromboembolism. 1270 27

The dramatic advances that have taken place in recent years in the care of sick and premature infants also have been matched by a similar increase in the use of blood transfusion therapy. Haematological features indicate that a newborn has a blood volume of 85-125 ml/kg the foetal haemoglobin is 60-85% and average Hb in full term infant is 18 gm/dl. By 2-3 months it falls to 11-12 g/dl the main cause of anemia are iron poor diet, weaning diets recurrent or chronic infections and hemolytic episodes in malarious areas. The red cells transfusions are usually top up transfusions, exchange transfusions, partial exchange transfusions. Top up- are for investigational losses and correction of mild degrees of anemias, upto to 5-15 ml/kg. They comprise 90% of all neonatal transfusions and are used in low birth babies in special care units for a maximum of 9-10 episodes. The walk in donor programs once popular are not much in vogue. The threshold for transfusion is 8-10 g/dl Hb for upto 5 weeks. Exchange transfusions are done for correction of anemia, removal of bilirubin, removal of antibodies and replacement of red cells. Ideally plasma reduced red cells that are not older than 5 days are used. It is prepared by removal of 120 ml of standard whole blood donation. The advantage of fresh cells is that hyperkalemia is avoided and good post transfusion survival acceptable red cell oxygen affinity. However it has to be screened for sickle cell disease and G6PD deficiency. Indications for exchange transfusion are kernicterus, neonatal hemolysis, G6PD deficiency, ARDS, neonatal sepsis, DIC and neonatal isoimmune thrombocytopaenia. Complications include over transfusion, perforation of major vessels, hypocalcaemia, citrate toxicity, hypothermia, hypoglycaemia, thrombocytopenia, necrotizing enterocolitis, GVHD, bacterial, viral infections. Partial exchange transfusions are done for symptomatic anemia, where Hb<10 g/dl, it is indicated in polycythemia and hyperviscosity syndromes. Exchange volume = Blood volume x (observed Hct-Desired HCt) divided observed Hct. Points to consider-there is weak expression of ABO antigens so particular care while grouping. Transfusing volumes should be 2-5 ml/kg/hour in paediatric bags of 50-100 ml with infusion devices. Platelet transfusion are indicated in neonatal throbocytopaenia, thrombocytopaenia due to sepsis, DIC, bacterial pathogens, CMV, TORCHS, Obstetric conditions such as pre eclampsia, intrauterine death abruption placenta birth injury hypoxia schock neonatal iso immune thrombocytopaenia and maternal ITP. Administration 1 RDE/pack per 2.5 kg single dose of fresh platelets less than 24hrs which contains 55 x 10(9) cells. This also contributes fresh plasma so is useful for coagulation defects also, though there is a risk of CMV and GVHD due to leucocyte contamination. Granulocyte concentrate; Gravity leucopheresis-1:8 ratio of 60 ml of 6% HES made to stand for 1hr.
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PMID:Component therapy. 1451 88


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