Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The humoral antibody response to Bacteroides fragilis infections in humans, with particular reference to ss. fragilis, was studied using an enzyme immunosorbent assay (EIA). Phenol-water extracted polysaccharide fractions (PS) from B. fragilis ss. fragilis, ss. ovatus, ss. distasonis and ss. vulgatus were used as antigens. Antibody titer determinations were done on sera collected from 57 patients where B. fragilis had been cultured and from 50 controls. In patients with septicemia caused by B. fragilis ss. fragilis a significant titer increase (greater than or equal to doubling) against PS from strain 9343 was seen during the course of the illness. In sera from patients with appendicitis, and where B. fragilis was isolated from the appendix, a titer increase against B. fragilis ss. fragilis 9343 was observed for 6 of 17 patients. However, in sera from 9 of the 17 patients a titer increase against B. fragilis ss. ovatus was also seen. No titer increase was observed in sera from most of the patients with salpingitis where B. fragilis had been isolated. In sera from 10 patients with Crohn's disease the median antibody titer against all four B. fragilis antigens was slightly higher than in sera from the controls. The median antibody titer against B. fragilis ss. ovatus was, however, significantly higher. Our experience is that a humoral antibody response against B. fragilis ss. fragilis can be expected in patients where the organism is isolated from blood. In diseases like appendicitis and salpingitis titer increases are less common. When they occur they are not necessarily directed against ss. fragilis only but are as frequent against ss. ovatus. Titer increases against ss. vulgatus and ss. distasonis are also seen. This raises the question if the observed titer increases are a consequence of a specific pathogenic role of B. fragilis in these infections, or if they merely represent the result of an antigenic stimulus as a result of an increased permeability of the mucosal barriers caused by inflammation and/or surgical manipulation.
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PMID:The humoral antibody response to Bacteroides fragilis infections in humans. 28 65

The incidence of bilharziasis of the Fallopian tube was studied in a control group of patients and in patients with ectopic pregnancies and severe salpingitis, but no significant difference was found. Two groups of 55 patients, each of which comprised 17 with ectopic pregnancies and 38 with severe pelvic sepsis, were studied for parity, symptoms and signs. Patients in one group suffered from tubal bilharziasis and those in the other did not. The findings in these two groups were similar and a typical clinical picture for bilharziasis was not found.
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PMID:Bilharzia of the Fallopian tube. 115 77

A 32-year-old woman with acute salpingitis had signs and symptoms of sepsis, with hypotension, renal failure, acute respiratory distress syndrome, and disseminated intravascular coagulation. Streptococcus pyogenes group A was grown from blood cultures taken at the onset of illness, and salpingitis was confirmed at laparotomy. The patient recovered after appropriate antimicrobial and intensive supportive therapy.
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PMID:Septic shock and acute respiratory distress syndrome after salpingitis caused by Streptococcus pyogenes group A. 265 6

In December, 1984, an outbreak of pyoderma affected five scrum players in the St Thomas' Hospital rugby team. The causative organism, Streptococcus pyogenes, was acquired during a match against a team experiencing an outbreak of impetigo, and was transmitted to two front row players of another team a week later, and to two girlfriends of affected St Thomas' players a month later. The strain was M-type 49, tetracycline-resistant, and virulent. It caused salpingitis in a girlfriend and acute glomerulonephritis in one rugby player. No case of subclinical glomerulonephritis was detected in eight patients with pyoderma. Screening of the St Thomas' Hospital team revealed four further cases of non-streptococcal skin infection, with evidence for contemporaneous spread of Staphylococcus aureus. Teams should not field players with sepsis, and it may be advisable to apply a skin antiseptic to traumatised skin after the match.
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PMID:Scrum kidney: epidemic pyoderma caused by a nephritogenic Streptococcus pyogenes in a rugby team. 287 37

Because of the high incidence of beta-lactamase production among bacteria that are found commonly in pelvic infections in women, beta-lactamase-inhibiting antibiotics should prove effective in treating those infections. In a randomized, comparative study of 47 women with intraabdominal infections, 23 received ticarcillin disodium/clavulanate potassium, and 24 received cefoxitin. Among the infections treated were endometritis, pelvic inflammatory disease, amnionitis, salpingitis, septicemia, intraabdominal abscess and pelvic abscess. The bacteriologic response to ticarcillin disodium/clavulanate potassium was 88.8% success as compared with 87.5% for cefoxitin. Clinical cures were achieved in 98.8% of patients treated with ticarcillin disodium/clavulanate potassium and 90.9% of patients treated with cefoxitin. The adverse reactions were diarrhea, transient eosinophilia and transient thrombocytosis.
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PMID:Infection in women. Clinical experience with beta-lactamase inhibitors. 329 5

A disease consisting of suppurative endometritis, salpingitis, perioophoritis and/or peritonitis has been an important problem in aging B6C3F1 mice on some chronic chemical carcinogenicity studies. Klebsiella oxytoca was identified as the most likely causative agent based on cultural isolations from lesions. A study was done to determine prevalence of K. oxytoca in the "normal" flora of mice from different breeding facilities. In a survey of 684 retired female breeder mice from 10 National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) and National Cancer Institute (NCI) production facilities, K. oxytoca was isolated from only 1% of nasopharynxes, vaginas and ceca in mice from 7 of 10 facilities. Epizootiology of the natural infection was investigated using the capsular and biochemical typing methods on 97 isolates of K. oxytoca from mice of 11 NIEHS and NCI production facilities and sentinel mice from three National Toxicology Program testing facilities. A few capsular types were associated with either lesions, nonlesion isolation sites, or certain facilities but the capsular typing method was not reproducible. No associations were found for any biotypes. A K. oxytoca isolate (capsular type 20, biotype A) from a typical case of perioophoritis was used in attempts to reproduce the natural disease in Klebsiella-free B6C3F1 female mice. Mice were inoculated at 6 months of age by the intravaginal, intrauterine or intraperitoneal route with one of four doses of K. oxytoca and killed at 4, 7 or 10 months post-infection. Some mice given high doses (10(6) or 10(8) colony forming units) of K. +oxytoca died of septicemia and a few developed mild inflammatory lesions in the uterus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The role of Klebsiella oxytoca in utero-ovarian infection of B6C3F1 mice. 359 83

This comprehensive review on puerperal infections covers risk factors, causative bacteria, pathophysiology, diagnosis, therapy of specific entities, and prevention. Puerperal infection is problematic to define especially with antibiotics that change the course of fever. I may present as endometritis (most common), myometritis, parametritis, pelvic abscess, salpingitis, septic pelvic thrombophlebitis or septicemia, and also includes infections of the urinary tract, episiotomy, surgical wounds, lacerations or breast. Each of these is discussed in terms of contributing factors, microbiology, clinical findings, diagnosis, treatment, prevention and complications. Risk factors in general are cesarean section, premature rupture of the membranes, internal fetal monitoring, general anesthesia, pelvic examinations. The most common bacterial involved are group B and other streptococci, E. coli, Gardnerella vaginalis, Gram positive anaerobic cocci, Mycoplasma and pre-existing Chlamydial infections. Diagnosis of the causative organism is difficult because of polyinfection and difficulty of getting a sterile endometrial swab. Diagnosis of the infection is equally difficult because of the wide variety of symptoms: fever, abnormal lochia, tachycardia, tenderness, mass and abnormal bowel sounds are common. Therapy depends of the responsible microorganism, although 3 empirical tactics are suggested while awaiting results of culture: 1) choose an antibiotic for the most common aerobic bacteria; 2) an antibiotic effective against B. fragilis and one for aerobic bacteria, e.g. clindamycin and an aminoglycoside; 3) a nontoxic antibiotic active against most aerobic and anaerobic organisms, e.g. doxycycline or cefoxitin. An example of an infection recently described is pudendal-paracervical block infection, often signaled by severe hip pain. It is associated with vaginal bacteria, is usually complicated by abscess even with antibiotic coverage, and may end in paraplegia or fatal sepsis. Prevention strategies are straightforward: handwashing, changing scrub clothes, isolation of infected patients, restriction of staff contact and prophylactic antibiotics for cesarean section patients at high risk, starting when the cord is clamped.
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PMID:Puerperal infections. 700 91

The intervention of Dr. Luis Elmano Barroco was evaluated at a meeting on March 19, 1994, on the topic of the state of abortion after 10 years of the new abortion law. Some aspects of the law of 1984 are characterized as inappropriate and inadequate because of the experience of the maternity ward of Dr. Alfredo da Costa. It was expected that in the wake of the publication of the law, official health care institutions would provide services for termination of pregnancy in accordance with legal indications. However, a survey carried out by the Association for Family Planning in July 1993 revealed that more than 50% of hospitals did not perform abortions because of the inexistence of specialized services or lack of resources or on grounds of conscientious objection. Even a revision of the abortion law does not take into consideration the fact that before 12 weeks of gestation it is difficult to precisely confirm grave lesions or the physical and psychological state of health of the pregnant woman which could be potentially life threatening. It was not taken into account either that it is impossible to diagnose definitively chromosomal aberrations, severe diseases, and fetal malformation before the 16th week. The law did not contemplate the prevailing socioeconomical conditions either that lead to clandestine abortion with high morbidity and mortality from cervical lesions, uterine perforation, infections, sepsis, and salpingitis. Prenatal diagnosis for eugenic abortion can be carried out by cytogenetic analysis of the amniotic fluid and ecography, but such diagnosis probably amounts to only 30-40% of risk cases in the whole country. A recent study by the Johns Hopkins University indicated that the chance of survival of a child born before 24 weeks is nil, therefore the limit of induced abortion should be extended to the 24th week to facilitate diagnosis of possible genetic abnormalities.
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PMID:[Law 6/84: "an inappropriate law"]. 1217 70

Pasteurella pseudotuberculosis has been considered a widespread animal pathogen for many years, but only within the last decade has its capacity to cause human disease been recognized. Two forms of human disease have been established-acute septicemia and mesenteric lymphadenitis. Because mesenteric adenitis is frequently indistinguishable from acute appendicitis, blood serum was obtained from 66 consecutive patients who underwent operation for appendicitis and was examined for agglutinins to seven serotype strains of P. pseudotuberculosis. Agglutinins were obtained in 21.2% of this series. Titres of over 1/100 were found in three of three cases of mesenteric lymphadenitis, one of 11 with no apparent disease, and one of 46 with appendicitis. P. pseudotuberculosis was isolated from a lymph node in the latter case. Two to four follow-up samples of sera in each of these five cases had increasing and then decreasing titres, indicative of active disease. Titres of 1/15 or less were found in five of the cases of appendicitis, in one case of salpingitis, and in three with no apparent disease. The occurrence of these nine cases with low titres may be indicative of previous contact with the organism.Human infection with P. pseudotuberculosis is not unusual in the Edmonton region and is responsible for at least some cases of mesenteric lymphadenitis.
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PMID:Pasteurella pseudotuberculosis infection in man. 1395 43

Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) is associated with several types of extraintestinal infections, collectively known as colibacillosis. A heterogeneous population structure has hindered development of vaccines protective against all APEC. Recently, however, the existence of different APEC subpathotypes have been suggested, which are defined by specific disease syndromes and associated virulence genes. A collection of 14 APEC isolates representing clonal outbreaks of salpingitis accompanied by peritonitis and sepsis were characterized in the present study. All the strains carried large plasmids and the aim of the study was to investigate the similarity of these by sequencing, annotating and comparative analysis to identify potential vaccine targets. In addition, a comparison with gene content of human extraintestinal E. coli (ExPEC) subtypes was conducted. Results obtained demonstrated highly similar plasmid contents of the 14 APEC strains, despite the diversity of their chromosomal background. All 14 APEC carried the colicin V operon and numerous virulence genes. These included iss, traT, hlyF, eitABC, ompT, iroBCDEN, sitABCD, iutA and lucABCD. Several of these are shared with human ExPEC, implicating a possible zoonotic potential. Despite a diverse chromosomal background, it was concluded that the plasmid content of virulence genes are highly similar for the investigated APEC subpathotype. Based on their frequency, protein uniformity and subcellular localization iroN, iutA, iss, traT, ompT and etsC are suggested as vaccine-candidates. Experimental studies are, however, necessary to determine the protective potential of the candidates against the APEC subpathotype characterized by salpingitis, peritonitis and possibly septicaemia.
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PMID:Comparative genomics of multiple plasmids from APEC associated with clonal outbreaks demonstrates major similarities and identifies several potential vaccine-targets. 2246 57


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