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

Intrapulmonary activation of leukocytes and release of cellular mediators and enzymes are involved in the pathophysiology of the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). To investigate a possible role of local cytokines, we measured bronchoalveolar fluid (BALF) and plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) and its soluble inhibitors (sTNF-RI + RII), interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha), and granulocyte elastase in 14 patients at risk for ARDS and in 35 patients developing ARDS after trauma, sepsis, or shock. During clinical development of severe ARDS, BALF cytokines increased markedly: TNF-alpha from 116 +/- 36 to 10,731 +/- 5,048 pg/ml (mean +/- SEM), p = 0.001; sTNF-RI + RII from 3.7 +/- 1.4 to 24.6 +/- 2.6 ng/ml, p less than 0.05; and IL-1 beta from 7,746 +/- 5,551 to 42,255 +/- 19,176 pg/ml, p = 0.01. Plasma cytokines were not increased in most patients, nor were they correlated with the development or severity of ARDS. BALF elastase was higher in patients developing ARDS than in those at risk but not going into pulmonary failure (0.97 +/- 0.26 versus 0.28 +/- 0.13 U/ml, p = 0.026), and the highest values were observed in the early stages of severe ARDS (1.85 +/- 0.39 U/ml). BALF elastase levels correlated with IFN-alpha (r = 0.72, p less than 0.001). In conclusion, local release of TNF-alpha and IL-1 beta, possibly by pulmonary macrophages or other cells, and/or accumulation in the lung is associated with the development of ARDS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:High bronchoalveolar levels of tumor necrosis factor and its inhibitors, interleukin-1, interferon, and elastase, in patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome after trauma, shock, or sepsis. 158 41

Significant external forces are required to fracture a normal pelvis. These forces usually result from rapid deceleration or crushing injuries, and energy often is delivered to multiple anatomic sites in addition to the pelvis. Associated injuries are common, and numerous complications can occur in patients with pelvic fractures. During 4 years, the authors treated 144 men and 92 women with pelvic fractures from blunt trauma who were admitted directly to the University of Mississippi Medical Center. They had a mean age of 31.5 years, a mean Injury Severity Score of 21.3, and an average hospital stay of 16.8 days. Seventy-seven of the 236 patients (32.6%) had 137 complications, including 18 deaths. Most of these were infections such as pneumonia (6), urinary tract infections (8), wound infections (8), or sepsis without a defined source (10). There was a high incidence of pulmonary complications including Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome (12), significant atelectasis (7), and fat emboli (3). Musculoskeletal complications (13) and coagulopathy (12) also occurred frequently. Eight patients had thromboembolic events, but prophylactic, subcutaneous heparin was not beneficial in preventing these complications. Patients with complications had higher Injury Severity Scores, lower Trauma Scores, increased transfusion requirements, longer hospital stays, and greater hospital charges compared to those without complications (P less than 0.01 for all variables). There was no association of complications with patient age, sex, mechanism of injury, anatomic site or amount of displacement of the pelvic fracture, or vector of injury. Patients with unstable pelvic fractures were much more likely to have complications than were those with stable pelvic fractures (P = 0.013).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Complications of pelvic fractures from blunt trauma. 158 80

Because of its neutrophil-activating properties, interleukin-8 (IL-8) may play an important role in the pathophysiology of sepsis. We measured circulating IL-8 levels in 47 patients with clinical sepsis. Levels on admission were elevated in 42 of the 47 patients (89%) and were comparable in patients with gram-positive or gram-negative infections. Patients with shock had significantly higher IL-8 levels than normotensive patients (P = 0.0014, Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test), whereas no differences in IL-8 levels were found between patients with or without adult respiratory distress syndrome. Patients who died had higher IL-8 levels on admission than the patients who survived. The largest differences in IL-8 levels between survivors and nonsurvivors was found when only patients with positive cultures were considered (P = 0.0342). IL-8 levels appeared to correlate significantly with lactate levels and inversely with leukocyte and platelet numbers and mean arterial pressure. In addition, the IL-8 level in the sepsis patients was found to correlate significantly with levels of IL-6, elastase-alpha 1-antitrypsin, and C3a. Serial observations revealed that in most patients IL-8 levels decreased, irrespective of the outcome. Thus, our results demonstrate that IL-8 levels are increased in most patients with sepsis and correlate with some important clinical, biochemical, and inflammatory parameters. These findings suggest a role for IL-8 in the pathophysiology of sepsis.
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PMID:Interleukin-8 in sepsis: relation to shock and inflammatory mediators. 161 48

Systemic oxygen delivery (DO2) is normally four to five times higher than oxygen consumption (VO2), and VO2 is independent of DO2. If DO2 is decreased to less than twice VO2, a state of anaerobic metabolism and supply dependency occurs. Some authors have reported that this biphasic relationship is altered in the adult respiratory distress syndrome or sepsis to a condition of continuous supply dependency. If that were true, it would affect both our understanding and management of metabolism during sepsis. Therefore we measured VO2 and DO2 in a dog peritonitis model. DO2 was regulated with controlled pericardial tamponade. During sepsis VO2 increased 28% from a mean baseline of 5.6 to 7.3 cc O2/kg/min (p less than 0.005). As progressive cardiac tamponade was applied during sepsis, the DO2/VO2 ratio fell. When the DO2/VO2 ratio was greater than 2.4, VO2 remained independent of DO2. At DO2/VO2 ratios less than 2.4, VO2 was dependent on the level of DO2, and it diminished rapidly as DO2 decreased. Oxygen saturation in mixed venous blood (SvO2) consistently reflected the DO2/VO2 ratio in a fashion similar to that in normal dogs. A ratio of DO2/VO2 of 2.4 corresponded with an SvO2 of 42% +/- 12%, which was identified as a statistically significant critical SvO2 that marked onset of VO2 supply dependence. In this dog septic model, VO2 is independent of DO2 when DO2 is adequate. A state of continuous supply dependency does not exist. SvO2 reflects the status of the DO2/VO2 relationship in the septic state.
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PMID:Oxygen kinetics in experimental sepsis. 162 Dec 25

Between 1972 and 1989, the incidence of viridans streptococcal bacteremia at the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston increased from one case per 10,000 admissions to 47 cases per 10,000 admissions (P less than .0001). A shock syndrome characterized by hypotension, rash, palmar desquamation, adult respiratory distress syndrome, and occasionally death developed in 26% of cases of streptococcal septicemia but in only 4% of cases of septicemia involving other gram-positive bacteria (P = .0005). The risk of streptococcal infection increased with the prophylactic administration of trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole or a fluoroquinolone (P less than .0001) and with profound neutropenia (P less than .0001). Treatment of chemotherapy-induced gastritis with antacids or with histamine type 2 (H2) antagonists was associated with a sevenfold increase in risk (P less than .001), while sucralfate therapy did not increase risk (P = .65). Streptococcal infection may result from gastric overgrowth of organisms resistant to trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole in an antacid- or H2 antagonist-induced alkaline environment, with the gastrointestinal tract ulceration caused by antineoplastic therapy providing a convenient portal of entry. In patients receiving chemotherapy, replacement of antacids or H2 antagonists by an acid-sparing regimen should be considered to preserve the natural acidic barrier to infection.
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PMID:Septicemia and shock syndrome due to viridans streptococci: a case-control study of predisposing factors. 162 76

Gram-negative sepsis has dramatically increased in frequency throughout the twentieth century in the United States. Currently, approximately 200,000 patients develop gram-negative sepsis each year in this country. Of these, about one-quarter develop the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Among these critically ill patients, mortality is estimated at 60%-90%. In the complex series of events leading to acute lung injury in gram-negative sepsis, endotoxin is the proximal mediator. Although endotoxin may be capable of causing direct injury to the pulmonary endothelium, its primary role is as a trigger activating inflammatory agents, including complement, neutrophils, and platelets, and inducing the production of cytokines and arachidonic acid metabolites. The end results are impairment of the endothelial barrier, diffusely increased capillary permeability, and adherence of neutrophils to the endothelium with subsequent migration into the tissues. The consequent clinical syndrome is one of acute respiratory distress with pulmonary edema, poorly compliant lungs, and refractory hypoxemia. Endothelial injury often becomes widespread, leading to the failure of multiple organs, including the kidneys, brain, intestine, and liver. Conventional therapy consists of supplemental oxygen, positive end-expiratory pressure, inotropic agents, fluid management, and antibiotics aimed at the offending pathogen. Recent discoveries regarding the mediators of sepsis as well as the expansion of the biotechnological armamentarium have provided clinicians with a plethora of new tools with which to manipulate the host's inflammatory response. The challenge for the next decade will be to ensure the safety, efficacy, and cost-effective use of these expensive but potentially lifesaving immunomodulators, singly or in combination, as adjuvant therapy.
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PMID:Gram-negative sepsis and the adult respiratory distress syndrome. 162 78

Increased synthesis of peptidoleukotrienes may occur in a variety of inflammatory diseases. To test this theory, hospitalized patients with a variety of diseases were studied and urine LTE4 quantitated as an index of total body peptidoleukotriene synthesis. 10 patients with ARDS, 7 of which had additional organ involvement, and 5 patients suffering from severe burn injuries were studied. Patients with uncomplicated ARDS excreted approximately 6-fold higher amounts of LTE4 in urine compared to healthy subjects. When ARDS was complicated by multiple organ failure (MOF), urine LTE4 levels were 2- to 150-fold higher than in healthy volunteers. Patients with severe burn injuries had peak urine LTE4 levels which were approximately 20-fold higher than in healthy volunteers. As additional controls, patients with cardiac arrhythmias (absence of inflammatory disease) and patients with uncomplicated pneumonia (localized inflammation) showed normal or mildly elevated urinary LTE4 levels. The urinary LTE4 levels in ARDS patients did not correlate with serum creatinine, bilirubin, or LDH levels, or with the WBC, nor did renal or liver failure by itself predict extremely elevated urinary LTE4 levels. In conclusion, patients with ARDS or ARDS/MOF and patients with severe injuries and sepsis syndrome excrete higher levels of urinary LTE4 than patients healthy volunteers or patients with limited inflammatory disease. In certain situations, urinary LTE4 levels may be useful as a marker of the degree of inflammation.
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PMID:Elevated urinary leukotriene E4 excretion in patients with ARDS and severe burns. 165 13

Neutrophils and neutrophil-derived oxidants have been implicated in the development of acute lung injury such as that seen in the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), in bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), and in animal models of lung injury, including the isolated perfused lung. Both neutrophil-derived oxidant production and retention of neutrophils in the lung are required for injury in this model. Pentoxifylline can reduce lung injury from sepsis in the guinea pig and endotoxin-induced neutrophil sequestration and lung injury in the dog. It is also known to increase neutrophil deformability, which may affect retention in the pulmonary microvasculature. We evaluated neutrophil oxidant production, retention in isolated lungs, and neutrophil-mediated acute lung injury after phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) in the presence of pentoxifylline. Pentoxifylline (2 mM) significantly reduced superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide production in vitro from PMA-stimulated neutrophils when pentoxifylline was directly added to the incubation mixtures, but not when neutrophils were preincubated with the agent. Pentoxifylline did not reduce retention of neutrophils in isolated lungs as determined by infusion of 111In-labeled neutrophils and gamma counting. Pentoxifylline prevented increases in total lung weight, lung-to-body-weight ratio, and perfusate thromboxane concentrations when it was present in perfusate buffer, whether or not neutrophils were preincubated in pentoxifylline prior to infusion into the lung. Pentoxifylline did not reduce injury to lungs perfused with glucose and glucose oxidase. We conclude that pentoxifylline reduces neutrophil oxidant production and neutrophil-dependent lung injury.
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PMID:Pentoxifylline reduces injury to isolated lungs perfused with human neutrophils. 166 Feb 29

The alterations in lung glutamine (GLN) metabolism that occurs in the endotoxin-injured lung were studied in rats and subsequently correlated with flux changes that occur in patients with the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Measurements in animals were made at various time-points following the administration of endotoxin, while studies in surgical patients were done in a group of healthy controls, in patients with "early" sepsis who had normal chest x-ray films, and in patients with radiographic and physiologic evidence of ARDS. In healthy control rats, net amounts of GLN are released by the lungs into the systemic circulation. This release rate doubled 30 minutes after intravenous endotoxin (1,580 +/- 320 nmol GLN/100 g BW/min vs. 736 +/- 179 in controls, p less than 0.01) but glutamine synthetase activity was unchanged, suggesting an outpouring of cellular glutamine stores. Two hours after endotoxin treatment, this accelerated fractional release of glutamine by the lungs was no longer detected. By the 12-hour time-point, the lungs reversed to an organ of net glutamine balance (234 +/- 248 nmol/100 g BW/min, p less than 0.05 vs. controls and ENDO30 min) despite a more than two-fold increase in glutamine synthetase activity (p less than 0.01). Simultaneously, lung weights were increased by 21% (p less than 0.01) and histologic examination showed an interstitial infiltrate and pulmonary edema. Similar observations were made in humans; patients with "early" sepsis exhibited a marked increase in lung glutamine release, while patients with ARDS demonstrated glutamine balance across the lungs (4,030 +/- 910 nmol GLN/kg BW/min vs. 637 +/- 496 in ARDS, p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Glutamine metabolism by the endotoxin-injured lung. 167 90

A method of percutaneous tracheostomy (PT) using a tracheostome, which permits insertion of a full-sized cuffed tracheostomy tube, was evaluated in 61 critically ill or injured patients (89% had trauma). Of the 54 trauma patients, 65% had brain injuries, 14% had injuries to the cervical spinal cord, 33% had face or jaw injuries, and 15% had lung injuries. The indications for PT were coma (46%), acute airway obstruction (5%), face or jaw injury (20%), pneumonitis (39%), adult respiratory distress syndrome (12%), and sepsis (21%). Tracheostomy was done in 51% of all cases specifically for managing pulmonary secretions, in 37% for prolonged intubation, and in 25% for neurologic lesions. The tracheostomy was done as an emergency in 5%, as urgent in 28%, and electively in 77%. Percutaneous tracheostomy was successful in 90% of the cases, and in 8% it was converted to a surgical tracheostomy after an initial percutaneous attempt. In 46% it was performed at the bedside, in 46% in the operating room, and in 7% in the emergency suite. A full-sized tracheostomy tube (#6 to #8) was used in all cases and was considered optimal or larger than needed in 87% of cases. With three exceptions the complications of PT were minor, but 30% of the patients died of their primary disease. In one case death occurred because of bronchospasm and cardiac arrest during the PT, but appeared to be independent of the type of tracheostomy. Healing after in-hospital removal (37%) was excellent in 95% of cases and 97% of physicians indicated that they would use the device again.
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PMID:Percutaneous tracheostomy after trauma and critical illness. 174 Jul 91


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