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

Seventy-one patients with systemic lupus erythematosus and clinical evidence of nephritis were seen during a 15-year period, and followed for a mean of seven years. Survival was calculated to be 76 per cent at five years and 57 per cent at ten years from onset of clinical nephritis; and 80, 65, 55 and 55 per cent five, ten, fifteen and twenty years from onset of clinical lupus. Renal biopsies showed mild or focal lesions in 30 per cent of patients, membranous lesions in 14 per cent and diffuse proliferative lesions in 55 per cent. However, there was no difference in the long-term outcome of the different histological groups. Nineteen patients (27 per cent) died during follow up, eleven from renal failure, six from sepsis and two from cerebral lupus. Death in renal failure is now usually a late event in lupus, even in patients with clinical evidence of severe nephritis. The prognosis of even severe lupus nephritis is now better than formerly reported. Reducing the dose of corticosteroid drugs, by the use of cytotoxic drugs such as azathioprine may have diminished the mortality from cardiovascular complications. Side effects of treatment, however, remain an important cause of death and morbidity.
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PMID:Systemic lupus with nephritis: a long-term study. 48 85

A previously healthy woman with a Shirodkar cerclage for cervical incompetence had a spontaneous rupture of the membranes at the 37th week of pregnancy. Three days later after a short period of weak labor pains, she developed a severe sepsis, uterine rupture and coagulopathy leading to renal failure, beta-hemolytic streptococcus group B and peptostreptococcous could be cultured from the amniotic fluid immediately after rupture of the membranes and from the uterus and placenta.
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PMID:Maternal sepsis, uterine rupture and coagulopathy complicating cervical cerclage. 48 26

Very significant morbidity and mortality continue to accompany lower extremity amputations. In this study 90 patients underwent 110 amputations over a 4 year period. The overall complication rate was 40 per cent and the overall mortality rate 12.2 per cent. The patients at greatest risk were the above knee amputees greater than 60 years of age with peripheral vascular disease. Amputation of the lower extremity must be recognized as a major, life-threatening procedure. Careful preoperative evaluation of cardiac, pulmonary, and nutritional status along with efforts to prevent sepsis, pneumonia, pulmonary embolism, gastrointestinal ulceration, and renal failure are necessary if the mortality accompanying these procedures is to be reduced.
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PMID:Lower extremity amputation: review of 110 cases. 50 12

We reviewed the mortality experience in Halifax burn units over the ten-year period January, 1967, to April, 1977. Major complications leading to death were examined and related to initial injury, length of survival, and preexisting disease. When possible, antemortem diagnoses were compared with postmortem pathological findings. Renal failure, sepsis, and pulmonary complications were the most frequent causes of death in burn patients. The patients who died from renal failure tended to expire soon after being burned, and tended to have been inadequately hydrated during the long journey to Halifax. Patients with sepsis did not die within the first 48 hours of being burned. Early excision of the burn wound with homograft replacement might have prevented some of these deaths. Pulmonary complications early in the postburn course appeared related to closed-space and possibly to inhalation injury. However, pneumonia tended to predominate later.
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PMID:A review of the mortality in the burns units at the Victoria General Hospital and the Izaak Walton Killam Hospital, January, 1967, to April, 1977. 54 17

Acute renal failure may be a contributory cause of death in patients with acute leukemia. The purpose of this study was to define the causes and course of acute renal failure in group of patients with acute leukemia in order to identify preventive measures and reversible aspects of the renal insufficiency. Among 88 patients with acute leukemia whose courses were followed to the time of death, ten developed acute renal failure. Etiologic factors of the renal failure were uric acid nephropathy, sepsis with complicating hypotension and hypovolemia, and the administration of nephrotoxic antibiotics. In one patient ureteral obstruction from clots was responsible for renal failure, while in another patient disseminated aspergillosis led to renal failure. Other causes of acute renal failure in persons with acute leukemia, but not observed in this patient group, are hypercalcemia and leukemic infiltration of the kidneys.
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PMID:Acute renal failure in patients with acute leukemia. 63 12

The first patient with an abdominal aortic aneurysm with rupture into the inferior vena cava associated with a horseshoe kidney is reported. Rupture of an aortic aneurysm into the inferior vena cava with formation of an aortocaval fistula has been reported in 100 patients. Aortic aneurysm in combination with horseshoe kidneys has been described in 34 patients. The diagnosis was made by an abdominal aortogram. The patient's preoperative condition was characterized by circulatory and renal failure subsequent to the development of a large aortocaval fistula. Operative repair was performed by dividing and rotating the kidney, dividing a renal polar artery, incising the aneurysm, and over-sewing the fistula from within. The patient's postoperative course was complicated by renal failure and sepsis and he died two months later. It is essential to preserve renal function in patients with this combination of anomalies.
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PMID:Abdominal aortic aneurysm with rupture into inferior vena cava associated with horseshoe kidney. 63 92

With improvements in the techniques of microvascular surgery, the Blalock-Taussig shunt has been applied to smaller infants. We report our experience in 17 neonates (mean age 9 days, mean weight 3.2 kg) who underwent emergency shung operations. The early mortality was 17.6% (3 of 17), with only 1 death (7%) from renal failure and sepsis, in the last 14 patients. Three shunts were patent but inadequate and required a secondary procedure, which was successful in all 3. There were 3 patients with late shunt failures at a mean of 15 months postoperatively, while 2 are still doing well at 15 and 18 months. No patients developed congestive cardiac failure. The late mortality was high (5 of 14), but was due to late shunt failure and was preventable in only 1 patient. These results are encouraging, and we continue to perform the Blalock-Taussig shung in neonates. It is hoped that improvements in technique will reduce the incidence of inadequate shunts.
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PMID:The Blalock-Taussig shunt in the neonate. 63

ECG, arterial flow and pressure were recorded during external cardiac compression (ECC) in a patient whose heart had ceased beating. The patient was a 68-year-old female who remained comatose for 2 weeks after an emergency laparotomy for perforated diverticulitis of the colon. She developed sepsis, renal failure, and cardiopulmonary failure. During ECC, the pressure on the sternum was maintained for about 0.5 sec (sustained pressure technique), flow and mean arterial pressure were improved by 32 and 20%, respectively, as compared with flow and pressure obtained with a quick and more jerky compression. During spontaneous heart activity with a low blood pressure, a superimposed ECC improved both flow and mean arterial pressure. Calcium chloride and adrenaline injected into the right atrium increased the tone and contractile power of the heart and greatly improved flow and pressure when the heart was subsequently compressed during asystole.
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PMID:On the technique of external cardiac compression. 65 21

The clinical course and follow-up of 14 neonates who developed acute renal failure are reported. Renal failure in these patients was secondary to major perinatal disorders, e.g., hyaline membrane disease, pneumonia, hemorrhage, or sepsis. Thirteen patients had hypoxia and nine were in shock when renal failure developed. Five patients died during the acute stage of renal failure. Of nine survivors, five patients sustained residual renal damage.
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PMID:Acute renal failure in newborn infants. 66 Mar 74

In a study of 310 burned patients, 27 of whom died, treated during a recent 3-year period, we have found that the following factors contributed to mortality: severity of the burn injury, advanced age of patients, race of the patients, cause of the burns, pre-existing medical problems, inadequate or inappropriate early resuscitative measures, and possible errors or oversights in the management of a few patients. Whether the patients were treated by general or plastic surgeons and whether the patients were "staff" or "private" appeared to have no significant bearing on survival or mortality. Death rates for the sexes were approximately equal. Deaths of patients who survived the immediate postburn period resulted mainly from pulmonary failure, renal failure, sepsis, and cardiac failure or from various combinations of these factors.
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PMID:Factors associated with deaths of burned patients in a community hospital. 66 Jun 96


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