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

This is a retrospective study of 133 episodes of bacteremic infection in 112 hemodialysis patients. The frequency of bacteremic infection was 9.5% in patients with chronic renal failure and 10.9% in patients with acute renal failure. In patients with acute renal failure, pneumonia and intra-abdominal abscess were the most frequent sources of septicemia. Sepsis was usually due to Gram-negative organisms and mortality was high. In patients with chronic renal failure, infection of the shunt or fistula was the most common cause, was frequently due to Staphylococcus organism, and had a more favorable survival rate. Gram-negative septicemia from a nonaccess source in patients with chronic renal failure was associated with a higher mortality. Bacterial endocarditis and septic pulmonary emboli occurred in 3.6% of septic episodes and 0.35% of patients at risk and had very low mortality. A low threshold for obtaining blood cultures and early antibiotic treatment are believed to be important in the treatment of bacteremic infections in patients undergoing long-term hemodialysis.
...
PMID:Bacteremic infection in hemodialysis. 50 22

Among 78 patients with persistant bacteriemia the latter was induced by staphylococci in 59 and by gram-negative microflora in 19 patients. In 14 of 19 patients gram-negative septicemia was preceded by staphylococcic one. Gram-negative septicemia would condition in patients the development of pyemic foci not only in the wound area but also in some portions of the body and in internal organs as well. Among 19 patients with gram-negative septicemia 12 patients died, while among 59 patients with staphylococcic septicemia there were 18 deaths.
...
PMID:[Gram-negative infections in severe thermal injury]. 82 88

Chest radiographs of 63 culture proven cases of neonatal septicemia were evaluated in this prospective study. Gram negative septicemia was responsible for 76.2% cases. Radiological abnormalities were observed in 27 cases (42.8%). Seven of these had no respiratory distress. The findings were right sided infiltrates (27%); hyperinflation (7.9%), bronchopneumonia (6.3%) and pneumothorax (1.6%). Increasing gestational age, late onset of illness (greater than 3 days) and presence of respiratory signs of distress had a positive correlation with presence of X-ray findings. Term newborns with respiratory distress of late onset sepsis (greater than 3 days) had significantly higher number (p less than 0.05) of abnormal radiographs. Presence of radiological abnormality neither influenced the clinical outcome nor was affected by the causative organisms. The practice of doing a chest radiograph routinely in cases of neonatal septicemia is justified irrespective of presence of respiratory signs of distress.
...
PMID:Chest radiographs in neonatal septicemia. 142 36

Immunosuppression increases the susceptibility to infection and changes the inflammatory response in children with severe protein-energy malnutrition. In this 5-year prospective study bacteremia was documented in 16% of 336 severely malnourished children, 2 to 34 months of age, who were hospitalized consecutively in the Tropical Metabolism Research Unit, Kingston, Jamaica. The 53 children had 60 episodes of nosocomial and community-acquired bacteremia with 69 blood isolates. Community-acquired bacteremia accounted for 72% (43 of 60) of bacteremic episodes. Thirty-five percent (24 of 69) of the strains were coagulase-negative staphylococci, 19% (13 of 69) were Staphylococcus aureus and 11% (8 of 69) were Streptococcus Group D. Seventeen episodes of coagulase-negative staphylococcal bacteremia were acquired in the community and 7 were nosocomial. These patients were more likely to have pneumonic consolidation than children with all other bacteremias combined (P < 0.02, Fisher's exact test). The bacteremia-related case fatality rate was 8% (5 of 60). Polymicrobial and Gram-negative septicemia were independent positive predictive factors for mortality when compared with single-agent and Gram-positive sepsis (P < 0.02). This 71% (49 of 69) prevalence of Gram-positive organisms suggests a change in the epidemiology from the predominant Gram-negative etiologies (76%) described in previous reports.
...
PMID:Coagulase-negative staphylococcal bacteremia in severely malnourished Jamaican children. 146 93

35 episodes of septicemia in 33 patients occurred among 269 consecutive patients with granulocytopenia (granulocyte cell count less than or equal to 0.5 x 10(9)/l) during the 7-year period 1982-1988. 59% of isolated bacteria were Gram-positive (Staphylococcus aureus, Staph. epidermidis, Streptococcus species and Pneumococcus) and 41% Gram-negative (Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterobacter, Acinetobacter and Citrobacter). Compared to the 7-year period 1975-1981, there was a decrease in the relative number of patients with Gram-negative septicemia. Thus, a shift from a predominating Gram-negative etiology in the 1975-1981 period to a predominating Gram-positive etiology in the 1982-1988 period was noted. In both periods the mortality rate was high in patients with Gram-negative septicemia, especially in patients with a Ps, aeruginosa infection.
...
PMID:Septicemia in granulocytopenic patients: a shift in bacterial etiology. 150 41

Gram-negative septicemia remains one of the most serious forms of hospital-acquired infection. The most consistently virulent component of the gram-negative lipopolysaccharide (endotoxin) appears to be lipid A. Elucidation of the structure-function relationships of lipid A and the biochemical configurations required for endotoxicity makes possible the design of lipopolysaccharide antagonists and/or the production of poly- or monoclonal antibodies that may abrogate the biologic effects of endotoxin. The mechanisms of activity of lipopolysaccharide and the pathophysiologic events it triggers are now better understood than in the recent past. Lipid A triggers the release of mediators such as cachectin (tumor necrosis factor), thereby initiating a cascade of potentially lethal events. Although recent studies indicate no routine role for corticosteroids in gram-negative septic shock or acute respiratory distress syndrome, considerable progress has been made in the development of effective antibiotics. Recent studies of septicemia in neutropenic patients show survival rates significantly higher than those reported more than two decades ago.
...
PMID:University of California/Davis Interdepartmental Conference on gram-negative septicemia. 168 79

Gram-negative septicemia at times causes morbidity and mortality in newborn nurseries. Prophylactic intravenous immunoglobulin results in a significant decrease in incidence and severity of septicemia resulting from infection in infants. The present case report describes the successful use of high-dose intravenous immunoglobulin in a Flavobacterium-induced thrombocytopenia in a premature infant.
...
PMID:Intravenous immunoglobulin for Flavobacterium-induced thrombocytopenia in a premature infant. 190 35

Over a 6-month period 5 patients with obstructive jaundice developed Gram-negative septicaemia, all within 48 hours of undergoing endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography. The sepsis proved fatal in 3 patients, despite prompt decompression of the obstructed biliary system. In all cases the organism responsible was Pseudomonas aeruginosa and the source of infection appeared to be a contaminated water-bottle attached to the endoscopic apparatus. This report highlights the importance of disinfection techniques and reviews the present situation in respect of antibiotic prophylaxis.
...
PMID:Pseudomonas septicaemia after endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography--an unresolved problem. 218 80

Many animal studies have attempted to simulate the circulatory responses to Gram-negative septicemia (iv infusion of live bacteria, fecal inoculation into body cavities, and administration of purified endotoxins by various routes), but the contribution of the heart to the adverse hemodynamic derangements and thus to the pathogenesis of shock is difficult to determine because of peripheral vascular events that influence cardiac performance. When blood pools in the periphery, venous return decreases and cardiac output can decrease without a primary myocardial defect being present. However, early heart dysfunction has been recognized in sepsis. Hemodynamic monitoring has not reduced overall mortality, but it has been helpful in guiding fluid administration and evaluating response to vasopressor therapy.
...
PMID:Heart failure in septic shock: effects of inotropic support. 240 14

Five hundred and thirty-three patients in the Oxford renal unit were reviewed to determine the incidence of infection in one calendar year. There were 310 patients who received dialysis, 53 with acute renal failure and 211 with chronic renal disease. Renal transplant patients were not included in the study. Apart from infections related to dialysis access, patients on maintenance haemodialysis or continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis developed few serious infections unless they had another disease causing suppression of immune function. A total of 97 urinary tract infections were seen; in patients with chronic renal disease not receiving dialysis the incidence of urinary tract infection was significantly associated with increasing uraemia, with diabetes, and with treatment with azathioprine or cyclophosphamide. In patients with acute renal failure, Gram-negative septicaemia and fungal infections were important causes of morbidity and mortality, but cardiovascular disease caused 42 per cent of the deaths unlike results from other series where sepsis has been by far the commonest cause of death.
...
PMID:Infections in a renal unit. 259 47


1 2 3 4 Next >>