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

The effects of prophylactic and delayed treatment with high-dose methylprednisolone were evaluated in a porcine model of early adult respiratory distress syndrome induced by endotoxaemia. Spontaneously breathing pigs under ketamine anaesthesia were infused i.v. with E. coli endotoxin (10 micrograms . h-1 . kg-1) over 6h. Twenty animals received endotoxin without treatment. Eight animals were pretreated with methylprednisolone i.v., 60 mg . kg-1, followed by an i.v. infusion at a rate of 10 mg . h-1 . kg-1. Ten animals received the same dosage of methylprednisolone beginning 2 h after the start of endotoxin infusion. Pretreatment with methylprednisolone prevented the endotoxin-induced impairment in pulmonary gas exchange and the development of pulmonary oedema. The pulmonary hypertension was counteracted. Cardiac output (Qt) and O2 delivery were improved. Mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) increased and was higher than in the untreated endotoxin group. The profound fall in PMN count was inhibited, while the accumulation of these cells in the lung was still substantial. Survival was improved. Delayed methylprednisolone treatment prevented further deterioration in pulmonary gas exchange and tended to restore it towards baseline. The pulmonary oedema and pulmonary hypertension were reduced. Qt and O2 delivery did not improve. MAP was higher than in the untreated endotoxin group towards the end of the observation period. The decline in PMN count and the pulmonary accumulation of these cells were not significantly influenced. Survival was improved. These results indicate that high-dose methylprednisolone, when given early in the course of sepsis, might be of clinical value in prevention of the devastating pulmonary and circulatory complications of this disease.
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PMID:Prophylactic and delayed treatment with high-dose methylprednisolone in a porcine model of early ARDS induced by endotoxaemia. 390 10

1. With improvements in treatment of burn shock and wound sepsis, inhalation injury has emerged as the number one cause of fatality in the burn patient; it accounts for 20 to 84 per cent of burn mortality. 2. Only steam is capable of inflicting direct thermal damage; most injury is caused by incomplete products of combustion, the most important being aldehydes. 3. More accurate diagnostic techniques, including fiberoptic bronchoscopy and 133Xe scanning, have been added to the traditional clinical signs of inhalation injury, such as facial burns, singed nasal vibrissae, and closed space injury, and have led to a new estimation of a 30 per cent incidence among patients with major burns. 4. Patients with inhalation injury typically pass through three stages, those of acute pulmonary insufficiency, pulmonary edema, and bronchopneumonia. 5. The major early pathophysiologic changes seen in the lungs of burned patients related to edema. With inhalation injury this is probably mediated by the products of activated neutrophils. Later changes are the result of the reduction of surfactant and thus lung compliance. 6. Treatment consists of intubation at the first hint of respiratory distress; the issue of tracheostomy versus endotracheal intubation has not been scientifically resolved, but most centers employ prolonged nasotracheal intubation. Prophylactic antibiotics or steroids are not of benefit. Further care is only supportive and includes CPAP, PEEP, vigorous pulmonary toilet, humidification of inspired air, and antibiotics for documented infection. 7. Further advances await the development of pharmacologic methods of affecting the lung's response to injury, which includes altered capillary permeability and decreased immune function.
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PMID:Pulmonary injury in burned patients. 391 76

Sepsis is the most common cause of adult respiratory distress syndrome and is associated with the highest mortality. This article describes the pathophysiology of septic pulmonary edema, which is the culmination over time of many complex responses related to sepsis.
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PMID:Sepsis and pulmonary edema. 393 62

A 54 year old man, hospitalised for thoraco-abdominal pain resulting from a septicemia which gives positive hemocultures for streptococcus D Bovis, is diagnosed to have a splenic abscess which will require splenectomy. At the same time, an endocarditis develops and gets worse, with auriculo-ventricular blockade and, especially, major aortic insufficiency, which is the cause of death by a brutal and massive pulmonary oedema. In the progression of an endocarditis, the occurrence of a splenic abscess, primary localisation of the initial septicemia or the secondary of an arterial septic embolism, is a rare contingency compared to the frequency of splenomegaly or splenic infarction: less than 2 percent of the cases in the literature. This very atypical and exceptional case serves as a reminder, on the one hand, of the diagnostic inadequacy of echocardiography which cannot visualise vegetation in the course of progressive endocarditis, and, on the other, of the prognostic importance of auriculoventricular blockade in septal and aortic endocardial lesions.
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PMID:[Splenic abscess disclosing endocarditis]. 393 91

A review of the prelegal abortion scene in the US precedes discussion of the effect of injected soap, phenol, cresol, and their compounds. The latter is based on a review of 4 toxicology books. There is little difference in the symptoms after the instillation of phenols, cresols, or soaps. Any one of those agents can cause vaginal bleeding, abdominal pain and distension, nausea, vomiting, and cramps. The damage produced by the use of Lysol thus is due to both the phenol and soap components of the compound. Following instillation into the uterus, there is coagulation necrosis of the decidua and placental site. The toxin will invariable cause thrombosis of the intrauterine and parametrial veins. The thrombosis may spread to the entire pelvic vein plexus and paravaginal, paracervical, and ovarian veins. The liver and kidney are affected by the toxin. Icterus and bile pigments in the urine and clinical evidence of liver damage are seen often. Pulmonary edema has been described as have microscopic to massive pulmonary oil emboli and thrombosis. Depression of all bone marrow elements due to toxin has been reported. The red blood cells are further depressed in number because of hemolysis. Cerebral changes include oil emboli, cerebral coagulation, necrosis, and petechial hemorrhages. Until Studdiford and Douglas described gram-negative sepsis causing shock, patients admitted with hypotension accompanying septic abortion were thought to have concealed blood loss. Studdiford and Douglas showed that gram-negative septicemia could produce hypotension. With the advent of massive antibiotic therapy for septic abortion and septic shock, most of these patients could be saved. The kidneys, after exposure to phenolic-soap comounds, show mainly lower nephron changes. As long as the toxin is in the system those changes continue until irreversible renal damage occurs. It is essential to remove the source of the poison (the affected uterus) and then remove the circulating toxins. the main problem is removal of the circulating toxin. In addition to the problems produced by fixed and circulating toxin, it has been shown that most phenol-soap induced abortions are infected. Thus it is necessary to employ the optimal antibiotic therapy for septic incomplete abortion. The initial management phase moves along classic lines. First is monitoring the vital state and supporting the systems. This includes maintaining an intravenous solution with a large-bore needle, monitoring central venous pressure, measuring urinary output, monitoring the vital signs, maintaining adequate oxygenation, and supporting the blood pressure with blood vasopressors or other agents, as needed. Second is diagnosing the extent of the illness. Third is the initial treatment, which includes reestablishment of the blood volume with blood transfusions; aggressive coverage with double or triple antibiotic therapy; correction of hypofibrinogenemia with cryoprecipitate, fresh whole blood or fresh frozen plasma, as indicated; and avoidance of overhydration in the presence of actual or suspected renal failure. After antibiotic coverage has been established, removal of retained products of conception is indicated.
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PMID:Treatment of women who have undergone chemically induced abortions. 404 35

The case of a pregnant patient with diffuse scleroderma who died following Caesarean section under general anaesthesia is presented. The patient's postoperative course was complicated by pulmonary oedema and pulmonary hypertension, sepsis, thrombocytopenia and renal failure. Aspects of the disease which possess anaesthetic implications are reviewed.
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PMID:Scleroderma and pregnancy. Anaesthetic considerations. 405 5

Non cardiogenic pulmonary edema (PE) is frequently observed during the postoperative period. 56 patients with postoperative PE were divided into two groups: ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrom and NHPE, non hemodynamic PE. The incidence of primary pulmonary infection and pulmonary superinfection were investigated. Both groups were not different except for the level of PaO2 lower in ARDS. Mortality was higher in ARDS (80%) than in NHPE (42%). Pulmonary primary infection and superinfection were respectively observed in 33 and 10%, and 23 and 15% of ARDS and NHPE. Blood cultures were more frequently positive during abdominal sepsis than during pneumonia. Viral etiology was thrice noted in 13 pneumonitis. Value of diagnostic methods for respiratory infections is discussed.
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PMID:[Lung infection and acute adult respiratory distress syndrome during surgical resuscitation]. 405 51

Serum angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) levels were obtained in 24 control patients who were critically ill, in 11 patients with cardiogenic pulmonary edema, in 8 patients with status postcardiopulmonary bypass, and in 12 patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Mean values in cardiogenic pulmonary edema (24.3 +/- 3.9 SD) in cardiopulmonary bypass (19.5 +/- 3.1) and in patients with ARDS and no sepsis (n = 7, 19.0 +/- 5.5) were not significantly different from controls (20.7 +/- 2.8). In contrast, patients with ARDS and sepsis had markedly decreased serum ACE levels which fell outside of control range (n = 5, 8.6 +/- 2.3). The authors speculate that decreased ACE levels in the combination of sepsis and ARDS are due to the presence of circulating inhibitors of ACE. The finding of decreased serum ACE can be of potential clinical usefulness by raising the possibility of sepsis as the etiology of ARDS before results of blood cultures are available.
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PMID:Decreased serum angiotensin converting enzyme in adult respiratory distress syndrome associated with sepsis: a preliminary report. 626 54

Five patients with nonoliguric adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) secondary to severe sepsis showed improved blood oxygenation after up to 36 h of conventional therapy and mechanical ventilation with optimal positive end-expiratory pressure. However, metabolic acidosis was unchanged, and blood urea had increased. Some patients showed hemodynamic signs of incipient heart failure. After sequential hemofiltration, the altered physiologic shunt and blood pH returned to normal. Chest x-rays showed clearing of interstitial pulmonary edema. Patients recovered from ARDS in spite of fluid accumulation. Mechanical ventilation was stopped up to 8.5 h after the last hemofiltration. We postulate that convective ultrafiltration clears the blood of circulating low- and middle-weight vasoactive molecules implicated in the development of high microvascular permeability acute pulmonary edema secondary to sepsis.
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PMID:Sequential hemofiltration in nonoliguric high capillary permeability pulmonary edema of severe sepsis: preliminary report. 638 9

Indications for hemodynamic assessment by right heart catheterization include shock, pulmonary edema, severe trauma and sepsis. The introduction of the catheter and the location of the tip in the pulmonary artery, however, can cause severe complications. In the present study the incidence of complications was observed in 93 consecutive right heart catheterizations in critically ill patients with no evidence of recent myocardial infarction. The low incidence of complications during introduction and with the catheter tip located in the pulmonary artery justifies right heart catheterization in patients with hemodynamic and/or respiratory instability treated in an intensive care unit.
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PMID:Prospective study on the incidence of complications of right heart catheterization. 650 83


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