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)

In a retrospective survey, the 46 patients treated for urethral stricture at Dronning Ingrids Hospital, Nuuk, (the main hospital in Greenland) during the four year period August 1987-August 1991 are investigated, and the consequences of not treating urethral stricture are illustrated by a case. The patients are middleaged and older men generally with long and multiple strictures close to the sphincter. Gonorrhoea is the common cause of the stricture. The patients have obstructive symptoms, urinary infections and haematuria. Furthermore, nearly 1/4 of the patients have complications in the form of scrotal and perineal abscesses, and reduced renalfunction and rapidly lethal disease because of sepsis are seen. The urethral strictures tend to recur after treatment. Urethral stricture disease is undoubtedly underestimated in Greenland, and the investigation stresses this serious complication of venereal disease.
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PMID:[Urethral stricture in Greenland]. 146 39

The clinical observations carried out on 10 leprosy patients with HIV1-infection, admitted between 1.1.1986 and 1.5.1988 to the Salvation Army Hospital at Chikankata, Mazabuka, Zambia are described. A total of 8 of this group were newly-diagnosed borderline leprosy patients. Their clinical data were compared with those of 34 newly-diagnosed borderline leprosy patients, admitted in the same period--50% were men, 50% women. The clinical presentation, with respect to leprosy, on admission, did not differ very much in both groups. The incidence of neuritis in both groups was 50% (respectively 5 and 17). The outcome of specific therapy of neuritis was worse in the HIV1 patients than in the other group: only partial recovery in 4 out of 5 and no response in 1, compared with a complete recovery in 10 cases, and a partial recovery in 7 cases in the other group. A total of 6 patients of the HIV1-group admitted to have had multiple heterosexual contacts, 5 had a history of sexually transmitted disease, 7 had generalized lymphadenopathy and 4 presented with another disease in addition to leprosy. While in hospital the group of 10 HIV1-infected patients suffered 17 episodes of intercurrent disease against none in the other group; 1 patient (male) died with generalized dermatitis and sepsis; 1 woman died with fulminant hepatitis.
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PMID:Clinical observations on leprosy patients with HIV1-infection in Zambia. 164 Jul 80

The seroprevalence, clinical epidemiology, modes of transmission, clinical presentation in adults, pregnancy women and children, diagnosis, impact and control strategies of AIDS in Africa are covered in this review. HIV-1, the causative virus in AIDS, is epidemic in a central Africa belt from Gabon to the east coast, and from Uganda to Zimbabwe, with the highest prevalence in the lakes and highlands of Central Africa. HIV-2 causes a milder disease in Western Africa centered in Senegal. HIV infections occur primarily in young adult men aged 30-34, women aged 20-24, infants and children under 4, and a few girls. Transmission patterns vary widely depending on sexual customs in the ethnically diverse continent. Prevalence tends to be high in cities and among subgroups such as prostitutes, where promiscuity is restricted. Where female sexual permissiveness exists, seropositivity is high in women generally. Besides sexual behavior, risk factors for HIV in Africa also include uncircumcised man, oral contraception, STDs causing genital ulceration and Chlamydia infection. Transmission to neonates occurs, especially if the mother has advanced AIDS, but transmission by breast milk is uncertain. Transmission by blood transfusion is common because transfusion are up to 10 times as common in Africa as in the West, especially in obstetrics and pediatrics. Clinically, HIV infections present as herpes zoster in 95% of Africans, and commonly as slim disease: weakness, fever, chronic watery diarrhea and weight loss of unknown cause. Associated infection are candidiasis, cryptosporidiosis, isosporiasis, tuberculosis and salmonellosis. Other presenting symptoms are unusual sites of lymphadenopathy, cough and sepsis. Diagnosis can be made by the WHO clinical case definition, or be screening tests, which are now more reliable for African patients than formerly. In Africa, AIDS can cause destitution and disgrace for families, and will probable severely affect progress made national economies because of deaths of young productive adults. Strategies for control of HIV in Africa are outlined.
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PMID:AIDS in Africa. 218 39

This is a comprehensive review of the risk of infertility or adverse effects on pregnancy outcome, such as chromosomal or congenital birth defects, amenorrhea, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), or spontaneous abortion, after use of oral contraceptives, IUDs, induced abortion or spermicides. The sequelae reported for orals are chromosomal abnormalities, the VACTERL anomalies, masculinization of female fetus, Down's syndrome and post-pill amenorrhea. Several large studies found no increased risks for birth defects, although the risk of malformations when pregnant women inadvertently take the pill in early pregnancy was high in 1 of 2 such studies. Masculinization was reported with high dose combined hormone treatment and in 2 infants of a woman who took Enovid. the bulk of recent studies on secondary amenorrhea indicate that it is rare, but just as likely to occur in women with prior normal or abnormal menstrual patterns. One study found that amenorrhea is 7.7 times more likely to develop in women who took the pill to regulate menses. It is recommended that women with amenorrhea be screened for pituitary tumors and counseled before prescribing pills, and that those who fail to ovulate after stopping the pill be treated at least 6 months with clomiphene. A massing of all studies on the impact of 1st trimester induced abortion on subsequent fertility, premature delivery and spontaneous abortion, shows all relative risks around 1.0. After multiple abortions, the results are conflicting. In contrast, prior series analyzing illegal abortion have an unquestioned adverse effect on fertility and pregnancy outcome. Asherman's syndrome, a rare disorder of intrauterine adhesions, menstrual abnormalities, infertility and habitual abortion, has been associated with D & C abortion concurrent with pelvic sepsis, or traumatic pregnancy with D & C. This condition can be treated with moderate success. The bulk of IUD studies conclude that there is no overall decrement in fertility, while some disaggregated studies point the Dalkon shield as a higher risk and copper IUDs as a lower risk. PID and its consequences are now considered related to the immediate post-insertion time frame, or specifically to women who are at risk of contracting sexually transmitted disease, i.e., those with multiple partners, those with prior PID and nulliparas. Comprehensive review of current large series on spermicides shows no relationship between their use and spontaneous abortion or congenital malformation.
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PMID:Fertility after contraception or abortion. 220 74

Chlamydia trachomatis is now recognized as the most common sexually transmitted disease organism in the United States. Although the potential for vertical transmission of C. trachomatis from pregnant women to their infants is well established, the extent to which infection adversely affects pregnancy and causes perinatal complications remains controversial. We report herein the results of a prospective study of 270 pregnant women with endocervical C. trachomatis compared with 270 matched control subjects (age +/- 1 year, race, and socioeconomic status). Among the entire group (n = 540), the rates of pregnancy complications were: premature rupture of the membranes, 54/270 (10%); preterm delivery, 55 (11%); amnionitis, 20 (4%); intrapartum fever, 23 (4.3%); small for gestational age, 76 (14.5%); postpartum endometritis, 31 (6%); and neonatal sepsis, 10 (1.8%). No statistically significant differences were noted between cases and controls for any of these variables. In the subset of women with recent or invasive chlamydial infection, indicated by the presence of IgM antibody against C. trachomatis, preterm delivery occurred in 13/67 IgM-positive versus 8/99 IgM-negative (p = 0.03) cases. Premature rupture of the membranes was present in 13/67 IgM-positive versus 8/99 IgM-negative (p = 0.03).
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PMID:Chlamydia trachomatis infection and pregnancy outcome. 310 88

During the clinical trials 8,861 patients have been treated with ciprofloxacin worldwide. 3,822 of the therapeutic courses were valid for analysis of efficacy according to FDA standards. The following dosages were usually administered: UTI: 100 to 500 mg twice daily orally or 100 mg twice daily intravenously; RTI: 250 to 1000 mg twice daily orally or 200 mg twice daily intravenously; septicemia: 200 mg intravenously twice daily; gonorrhea: 250 to 500 mg single tablet orally; all other infections: 500 to 1000 mg twice daily orally or 200 mg twice daily intravenously. Ciprofloxacin was administered to 762 courses of lower RTI, 88 courses of upper RTI, 108 courses of bacteremia, 766 courses of skin structure infection, 142 courses of bone and joint infections, 149 courses of intra-abdominal infections, 33 courses of gastrointestinal infections, 1,633 courses of UTI, 49 courses of pelvic infections, 279 courses of STD, mainly gonorrhea, and three courses of meningitis. The clinical response was resolution in 76%, improvement in 18% and failure in only 6%. Bacteriologic response by all sites evaluable: pathogens were eradicated from 74%, markedly reduced in 2%, persisted in 10%. Relapse occurred in 4% and reinfection was observed in another 6%. The overall response was favourable for 90% of the patients. Drug safety was established on a data base of 8,861 courses worldwide. The following side-effects according to COSTART terminology were observed: digestive 5%, metabolic nutritional 4.6%, central nervous 1.6%, skin 1.4%, hemic and lymphatic 1%, cardiovascular 0.4%, body as a whole 0.4%, urogenital 0.3%, special senses 0.3%, musculo-skeletal 0.1%, respiratory 0.08%. Several courses had more than one reaction. Thus the total incidence of side-effects for the treated patient population was 10.2%. Ciprofloxacin is a highly effective drug and a breakthrough in several areas of medical interest. It is relatively safe and side-effects are usually mild or moderate in intensity and transient.
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PMID:Worldwide clinical data on efficacy and safety of ciprofloxacin. 328 11

The Gardnerella vaginalis-infection of the urogenital tract is of clinical importance in females and of epidemiological importance in males. Females suffer from Bacterial Vaginosis, with a foul-smelling grey vaginal discharge with a pH of 5.0-5.5 which contains "clue cells", and from Sepsis. The isolation and identification of G. vaginalis i necessary in man. If G. vaginalis-infection is suspected, simultaneous infections with further STD-agents such as N. gonorrhoeae, C. trachomatis etc should be excluded. Metronidazole (1 g/day for 5 days) is the drug of choice in G. vaginalis-infection.
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PMID:[Gardnerella vaginalis infection. Clinical aspects, diagnosis and therapy]. 331 83

The incidence of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), which can lead to serious reproductive impairment, infertility, or ectopic pregnancy, is increasing worldwide. About 500,000 women in their childbearing years contract PID for the first time each year in the U.S., and the incidence among young women appears to be increasing. Sexually transmitted diseases are responsible for many PID cases worldwide, while in developing countries postpartum and postabortion sepsis and endemic diseases such as filariasis and schistosomiasis may also be implicated. Some increase of PID is associated with legal abortion and IUD insertion, while pill use appears to protect women from PID. A worldwide review of medical literature indicates that the risk of PID is 3.5 times greater for IUD users than for nonusers, although several variables other than IUD use affect PID risk, such as age, race, socioeconomic status, and sexual activity. The risk for never pregnant IUD users in a Swedish study was 11.8 per 100 woman years, compared to 3.4 for ever-pregnant IUD users. There was no difference in relative risk for users of the pill or barrier methods, or for non-contraceptors. Another study reported a higher relative risk of PID related to duration of IUD use.
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PMID:IUD users may have higher risk of contracting PID, studies find; pill may have protective effect. 743 43

Researchers analyzed data on 52 HIV-positive patients with Kaposi's sarcoma (KS) aged 23-67 (74% Black, 26% White; male/female ratio = 2.8:1) referred to the Johannesburg General Hospital in South Africa during 1980-1990 to examine the hospital's experience with these patients. 23 patients had a fever and/or at least 10% weight loss. 34% had prior or coexistent opportunistic infection, particularly Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, fungal disease, or tuberculosis. Possible risk factors among 21 patients were homosexual intercourse, history of sexually transmitted disease, and drug abuse. Almost all patients had skin disease, either localized or disseminated. Other KS sites included the oral cavity, regional lymph nodes, and large bowel. 90% of 20 patients treated with radiation responded to treatment. Response rates for radiation treatment among the 20 patients were 80% for symptomatic relief, 45% for complete remission, 45% for partial remission, and 10% for tumor progression. The recurrence-free period among irradiated patients was five months. Five patients developed radiation-induced mucositis of the oropharyngeal region. None of the 32 patients treated with chemotherapy and not radiation experienced complete remission. Chemotherapy induced partial remission in 38% and tumor progression in 62% of patients. 9% of chemotherapy-treated patients experienced symptomatic relief. Deteriorating performance status and/or debilitating side effects (severe mucositis and neutropenic sepsis) necessitated cessation of chemotherapy or dose modification. The clinical course of AIDS-related KS in this population paralleled that in Western countries. Based on these findings, the authors recommend local radiation therapy to treat AIDS-related KS or a watch-and-wait policy for asymptomatic, minimal disease in patients with an intact immune status.
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PMID:Epidemic AIDS-related Kaposi's sarcoma in southern Africa: experience at the Johannesburg General Hospital (1980-1990). 757 Aug 33

A post-dated intra-uterine growth retarded male Malay baby was born to a 30-year-old mother gravida II by Caesarean section. Her previous pregnancy ended in still-birth. The baby was severely asphyxiated at birth. He was intubated and immediately admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit. He had anasarca, anaemia, purpura and firm, massive hepatosplenomegaly. X-rays revealed ascites and bilateral metaphysiitis of the long bones. The haemoglobin level was 5.0 gm/dl and PCV 18.3%. Coombs' test was negative. Prothrombin time (PT) and partial thromboplastin time (PTT) were prolonged. The baby and mother were positive for Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) and the treponema pallidum haemagglutination assay (TPHA) tests. The baby was actively resuscitated but expired at three and a half hours of life due to overwhelming sepsis associated with severe anaemia and disseminated intravascular coagulation.
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PMID:Case report--a neonate with nonimmune hydrops fetalis. 815 1


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