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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acute gestational pyelonephritis infrequently leads to nonhydrostatic permeability
pulmonary edema
known clinically as acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). In this form of ARDS,
sepsis
is considered the primary cause of pulmonary dysfunction. Decreases in colloid osmotic pressure, plasma fibronectin, and arterial oxygen saturation are associated with a worsening prognosis in septic conditions. We sought to investigate the changes in these parameters with acute gestational pyelonephritis to gain insight into the factors that may place the patient at risk for
sepsis
-related morbidity. Colloid osmotic pressure, plasma fibronectin, and arterial oxygen saturation via pulse oximetry were prospectively measured during the inpatient treatment of 17 pregnant patients with acute gestational pyelonephritis. All three parameters achieved their nadir within 24 hours of hospitalization and the initiation of therapy. Although no patient developed significant pulmonary dysfunction, we believe that patient susceptibility for
pulmonary edema
and general morbidity could be maximal in the first 24 hours after therapy. Future studies using a larger number of patients may identify one or more of these laboratory parameters as helpful in identifying gravid patients who are at risk of developing gestational ARDS.
...
PMID:Acute gestational pyelonephritis: the impact on colloid osmotic pressure, plasma fibronectin, and arterial oxygen saturation. 202 86
Basic therapeutic methods based on early diagnosis of septic ARDS were described. Concerning early diagnosis exertional hypoxemia and increased broncho-vascular markings on chest X-ray were observed in the pre-ARDS stage of septic patients. These findings were also observed in the initial stage of endotoxin-induced
pulmonary edema
in rabbits and the basic mechanisms were thought to be as follows, based or our experimental studies. The former is related on impairment of alveolar diffusion and the latter reflect increased peri-vascular cuffing due to increase in
pulmonary edema
. The diffuse infiltrative shadows on the both back area in CT scanning was also a helpful sign indicating the early stage of
pulmonary edema
. This finding was seen at the stage at which the edematous shadow had not yet appeared on conventional chest X-ray. Increase in serum laminin and decrease in plasma fibronectin were also important biochemical findings predicting ARDS in gram negative
sepsis
. Using these findings, it is considered that early prediction of septic ARDS is possible. Concerning therapeutic methods based on early prediction, the usefulness of cortico-steroids and the protease inhibitor "Urinastatin" were observed in experimental in vitro and in vivo studies. Some findings induced by endotoxin administration in rats or rabbits, such as the increase in endotoxin in peripheral blood, the distraction of PMN-elastase, the increase in pulmonary lymph flow and mortality within 48 hours were significantly suppressed by simultaneous treatment by corticosteroid. In an in vitro study, PMN superoxide production and elastase release following incubation of endotoxin and PMNs were significantly inhibited by adding a concomitant level of corticosteroid and/or urinastatin.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Sepsis and ARDS]. 203 89
Since Shumway carried out the first successful heart-lung transplant (HLT) in Stanford in 1981, HLT has become a new therapeutic means for patients with end-stage pulmonary disease or arterial hypertension. However, it is still rarely carried out because of a lack of donors and the complexity of the surgery and postoperative course. This review described the criteria for proper donor and recipient selection, as well as the anaesthetic and postoperative management of HLT patients at Marie Lannelongue Hospital. The lack of suitable organ grafts results, at least in part, from improper donor management.
Pulmonary oedema
by fluid overloading and excessive haemodilution should be carefully prevented. Low doses of catecholamines and vasopressin maintain circulatory stability and convenient organ function. The indications for HLT (primary pulmonary hypertension, Eisenmenger's complex, and end-stage bronchopulmonary disease) are all characterized by severe pulmonary hypertension, hypoxaemia and cardiac failure. Careful anaesthetic induction is required to avoid circulatory collapse. Cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) should be started early, so that mediastinal dissection may be carried out in satisfactory haemodynamic conditions. After unclamping the aorta, circulatory support with fluid and catecholamine infusion is often required. High inspired oxygen fraction and end-expiratory positive pressure may be required because of reperfusion
pulmonary oedema
. Blood transfusion is often needed as there are major blood losses due to dissection of the posterior mediastinum during CPB. Postoperative catecholamine administration is prolonged over several days. Negative fluid balance is often necessary to reduce
pulmonary oedema
. Improvement in surgical technique, early extubation, and late prescription of steroids have reduced the incidence of tracheal complications. Acute renal failure often occurs as a result of prolonged CPB, hypovolaemia, drug nephrotoxicity and
sepsis
. Bacterial complications (pneumonia, mediastinitis) are the main causes of early death. After the 15th postoperative day, opportunistic infections and allograft rejection are the main complications. Since 1981, major advances in HLT recipient management resulted in improved survival rates (70-80% at 1 year, and 60-70% at 2 years for the best teams). Despite the complexity of management, and the longterm threat of obliterative bronchiolitis, HLT is, at present time, the only possibility for these young patients to recover a normal quality of life.
...
PMID:[Anesthesia and intensive care for heart-lung transplantation]. 205 32
Recently introduced chloroquine resistant malaria has altered the clinical picture and complicated the overall management of malaria. 113 adults with proved malaria admitted at Harare Central Hospital, Zimbabwe, were evaluated to determine the incidence, nature, relationship to morbidity and mortality and response to treatment of the complications due to malaria. 47.7 pc (52 of 109) patients had relatively chloroquine resistant malaria. 87.4 pc (99 of 113) had complications whose percentage frequency of occurrence were: Anaemia 51.2 pc, diarrhoea and/or vomiting 42.2 pc, cerebral malaria +/- fits 39.2 pc, renal insufficiency +/- hyperkalaemia 26.4 pc, hypoglycaemia 15.6 pc, jaundice 15.2 pc, neuro-psychiatric 15.0 pc, shock 10.6 pc, concurrent
sepsis
8.9 pc,
pulmonary oedema
3.5 pc and hyperpyrexia 1.7 pc. Multiple complications in the same patient were common. The combination of cerebral malaria and renal insufficiency had the worst mortality (p less than 0.001). All patients dialysed, however, survived. Non-iron deficiency anaemia, 91.7 pc (51 of 55) and diarrhoea and/or vomiting, were common, worsened morbidity but not mortality (p = 0.555). A seriously-ill patient with malaria should be suspected of having complications and chloroquine resistance and should be referred promptly to a centre with facilities for dialysis. Anti-malaria drugs should be mixed in a dextrose solution and iron supplements should not be given routinely.
...
PMID:Complications of seasonal adult malaria at a central hospital. 209 79
Mechanically ventilated, nonsurgical, critically ill patients represent a group not rigorously studied by energy expenditure measurements for formulating nutritional support guidelines. Most strategies for predicting caloric requirements in this group are based on studies of spontaneously breathing surgical patients. It is unclear whether "severity of disease" or "stress" factors employed in this group are justifiable in medical patients with compromised pulmonary function, who may be particularly prone to the complications of overfeeding. We therefore measured the energy expenditures of 73 consecutive ventilator-supported patients with various primary diagnoses in a medical ICU. These results are compared to estimates of caloric requirements based on the Harris-Benedict equations, without modification for severity of disease or other factors. These comparisons are (kcal/day +/- SE, measured vs predicted):
sepsis
, 1,982 +/- 97 vs 1,534 +/- 56 (p less than 0.0001); cardiogenic shock, 1,452 +/- 119 vs 1,339 +/- 62; cardiogenic
pulmonary edema
, 1,427 +/- 87 vs 1,338 +/- 93; ARDS, 1,732 +/- 203 vs 1,550 +/- 125; pneumonia, 1,508 +/- 148 vs 1,259 +/- 55; and "other" 1,585 +/- 104 vs 1,419 +/- 55. These data reveal that in mechanically ventilated nonsurgical patients without
sepsis
, no modifications of the Harris-Benedict equations are necessary; in those with
sepsis
an increase of approximately 20 percent over these predictions is appropriate.
...
PMID:Energy expenditures of mechanically ventilated nonsurgical patients. 211 45
Many questions are raised in this review about the role of adult donor granulocyte transfusions in the setting of overwhelming bacterial neonatal
sepsis
. There clearly exists a number of variables, which influence the survival and morbidity associated with bacterial
sepsis
. The important differences in these studies highlight the need for prospective large multicenter studies to definitely clarify these issues. Important criteria, which are yet to be established and which impact significantly, include the time of administration of adjuvant granulocytes, the number of granulocytes that need to be harvested, which group of neonates require early granulocyte transfusions, the best method for optimal and easy granulocyte collection, the frequency and intervals of granulocyte transfusions, and improved methods for the early identification of neonatal candidates who would benefit from the granulocyte transfusions. The benefits of granulocyte transfusions (ie, the improvement in morbidity and mortality) in septic neutropenic neonates must be weighed against the possible and reported side effects associated with such transfusions. Adverse reactions including graft-versus-host disease, CMV, HIV and hepatitis infection, fluid retention and
pulmonary edema
, blood group sensitization, and pulmonary insufficiency may all result from the use of granulocyte transfusions in a host who has evidence of developmental immaturity. All future studies must continue to evaluate these potential complications to balance and analyze the true benefits of survival with reported treatment results. Recently, a number of investigators including ourselves, have begun to examine the role of alternate adjuvant immunotherapy in enhancing neonatal host defense in the clinical setting of overwhelming bacterial
sepsis
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The use of granulocyte transfusion in neonatal sepsis. 213 12
The usefulness of urinastatin (UST) for adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) induced by gram-negative
sepsis
was evaluated in clinical and experimental studies. Twelve cases of clinical septic ARDS were treated with combination therapy of UST and methylprednisolone (M-PSL). Ten out of 12 responded favorably. This result was considered to some extent to be better than that of our previous experience with single administration of M-PSL for patients with septic ARDS. Pathophysiologic experiments on UST in endotoxic status were then performed. Immediately after the intravenous administration of endotoxin to rats, serum levels of beta-glucuronidase and elastase released from PMNs were increased and
pulmonary edema
was observed at 48-hours after the endotoxin injection. Various degrees of
pulmonary edema
were also observed by the intravenous administration of beta-glucuronidase and PMNs-elastase. These changes induced by the endotoxin were significantly inhibited by the intraperitoneal administration of UST, and they were inhibited more by the combination therapy of UST and M-PSL. In an in vitro study, significantly large amounts of beta-glucuronidase and elastase were released from PMNs by incubating human PMNs with endotoxin. By adding UST to this system, the release of these PMNs proteases was inhibited. These results suggested that UST neutralizes the PMNs-elastase release in the status endotoxemics, and consequently resulted in a better prognosis in cases of septic ARDS.
...
PMID:[Usefulness of a protease inhibitor (urinastatin) in ARDS with infectious diseases]. 221 25
A technique of orthotopic liver transplantation using a segmental graft from living donors was developed in the dog. Male mongrel dogs weighing 25-30 kg were used as donors and 10-15 kg as recipients. The donor operation consists of harvesting the left lobe of the liver (left medial and left lateral segments) with the left branches of the portal vein, hepatic artery and bile duct, and the left hepatic vein. The grafts are perfused in situ through the left protal branch to prevent warm ischemia. The recipient operation consists of two phases: total hepatectomy with preservation of the inferior vena cava using total vascular exclusion of the liver and veno-venous bypass, implantation of the graft in the orthotopic position with anastomosis of the left hepatic vein to the inferior vena cava and portal, arterial and biliary reconstruction. Preliminary experiments consisted of four autologous left lobe transplants and nine non survival allogenic left lobe transplants. Ten survival experiments were conducted. There were no intraoperative deaths in the donors and none required transfusions. One donor died of
sepsis
, but all the other donor dogs survived without complication. Among the 10 grafts harvested, one was not used because of insufficient bile duct and artery. Two recipients died intraoperatively of air embolus and cardiac arrest at the time of reperfusion. Three dogs survived, two for 24 hours and one for 48 hours. They were awake and alert a few hours after surgery, but eventually died of
pulmonary edema
in 2 cases and of an unknown reason in the other. Four dogs died 2-12 hours postoperatively as a result of hemorrhage for the graft's transected surface. An outflow block after reperfusion was deemed to be the cause of hemorrhage in these cases. On histologic examination of the grafts, there were no signs of ischemic necrosis or preservation damage. This study demonstrates the technical feasibility of living hepatic allograft donation. It shows that it is possible, in the dog, to safely harvest non ischemic segmental grafts with adequate pedicles without altering the vascularization and the biliary drainage of the remaining liver. We propose that this technique is applicable to human anatomy.
...
PMID:Segmental liver transplantation from living donors. Report of the technique and preliminary results in dogs. 227 16
A 22 year-old man was brought to our hospital about twenty-three minutes following a high-speed motorbicycle accident in which he had blunt chest trauma. He was in severe respiratory distress with marked dyspnea and restless with extensive subcutaneous emphysema involving anterior chest wall, cervical and bilateral inguinal regions. A chest X-ray revealed bilateral pneumothorax involving mediastinal emphysema and also fracture of right submandibular and clavicula. In spite of orotracheal intubation and insertion of bilateral chest tube, continuous air leak and pneumothorax did not improve. Bronchoscopy revealed the disruption of mucosa of the right main bronchus at the bifurcation. Emergency right thoracotomy was performed and there was the complete disruption of the right main bronchus. Anastomosis of the right main bronchus with circumferential resection was undertaken on May 30, 1987 about two hours after trauma. About three months after reconstruction, bronchoscopic examination revealed stomal stenosis with deformation of tracheobronchial cartilage and granulation. The stenosis showed severe irregularity by deformed cartilage and thickened scar, so widening by Nd-YAG laser vaporization was inadequate in effect. Seven months after first reconstruction, we performed re-reconstructive operation, right upper sleeve lobectomy with partial resection of carcina and right wall of trachea for scar with severe deformation of cartilage. Following the operation, the patient suffered from
sepsis
with pneumonitis accompanied by
lung edema
. This complication was treated successfully. We considered that acute pneumonitis was caused by reventilation with increase of perfusion after tracheobronchial reconstruction. Consequently, we thought it important to treat such patients with long term IPPB postoperatively with adequate medication for respiratory system.
...
PMID:[Successful re-reconstruction for complete disruption of the right main bronchus by blunt chest trauma]. 232 99
Surgical treatment of 201 dogs with patent ductus arteriosus at the College of Veterinary Medicine, The Ohio State University was evaluated retrospectively to determine risk factors for development of surgical complications. During surgery, 15 dogs (7%) died because of hemorrhage associated with ductus dissection (n = 8),
pulmonary edema
(n = 4), ventricular fibrillation (n = 1), hemorrhage not associated with ductus dissection (n = 1), and cardiac arrest immediately after ductus ligation (n = 1). An additional 8 dogs (4%) died less than 1 month after surgery (total mortality before, during, and immediately after surgery, 11%). Nineteen dogs (9.5%) developed hemorrhage during surgery. Sixteen dogs developed complications other than hemorrhage (
pulmonary edema
[n = 4], cardiac arrest [n = 4], iatrogenic lung trauma [n = 3], ventricular fibrillation [n = 2],
septicemia
[n = 2], and recanalized ductus [n = 2]). Correlation was not found between age, sex, body weight, surgical technique (Jackson method vs standard method of dissection), or surgeon level of training and development of hemorrhage during surgery, other complications, or survival less than 5 days. Positive correlation (P less than 0.05) was found between hemorrhage and death within 5 days after surgery. Positive correlation (P less than 0.05) was also found between other complications and death within 5 days after surgery. Nineteen dogs survived surgery, but later died of unrelated causes (mean life span, 57 months); 63 of the dogs were still alive and doing well as of January 1990 (mean life span, 47 months after surgery). Contrary to previous reports, age, body weight, and surgical technique did not affect results.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Results of ligation of patent ductus arteriosus in dogs: 201 cases (1969-1988). 236 30
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