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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
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Home hyperalimentation is now recognized as a technique which allows patients with severe short bowel syndrome or inflammatory bowel disease to return to a near normal life style. The success of this program is dependent on the longterm use of a catheter through which intravenous fluids are infused. In the past 20 months, we have inserted 32 catheters into 22 patients for purposes of home parenteral nutrition. In a 1 to 20-month follow-up, the average duration of catheter insertion was 6 months, the longest has been 19 months in 2 patients. One patient with superior vena cava thrombosis has had a catheter inserted via a femoral vein which has been functioning well for 5 months. Thirteen catheters have been removed: 3 for obstruction, 2 for sepsis, 1 due to breakage of the catheter, 4 for slippage (3 were pulled out by the patient, and 1 was removed because of inability to psychologically accept the presence of the catheter). The removal of 6 of these 13 catheters was necessitated by breaks in the proper techniques of catheter care, which include daily dressing changes and heparinization of the catheter at least once daily. Techniques of catheter insertion and catheter care will be presented
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PMID:Exerience with the Broviac catheter for prolonged parenteral alimentation. 11 Sep 52

This report concerns 59 infants and children with short bowel syndrome, most commonly caused by necrotizing enterocolitis in this study. Resection of atretic or gangrenous bowel was performed in 53 patients, tapering enteroplasty and primary anastomosis was performed in 13 patients, and temporary enterostomies were performed in 40 patients. Second-look laparotomy was useful in two of four cases of questionable bowel viability. The ileocecal valve was resected in 32 patients and remained intact in 27. The mean length of the remaining bowel was 58.4 cm. All patients received total parenteral nutrition and early enteral feedings. Home hyperalimentation was attempted when 50 per cent of the calorie intake was enteral. Intestinal adaptation required from 3 to 14 months. Frequent setbacks were related to catheter sepsis, rotavirus infection, carbohydrate intolerance, and liver dysfunction. The overall survival rate was 80 per cent with mortality due to sepsis associated with total parenteral nutrition and liver failure.
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PMID:Morbidity and mortality of short bowel syndrome in infancy and childhood. 174 58

Between August 1980 and October 1990 we treated 36 patients with home total parenteral nutrition (HTPN) with a cumulative treatment duration of 92 years. They included 14 females and 22 males ranging in age from newborn to 75 years, with a mean of 38 +/- 21. The 4 commonest indications for HTPN were short bowel syndrome (mainly due to mesenteric occlusion (50%), inflammatory bowel disease 14%), motility disorders (14%) and malabsorption (11%). All-in-one nutritional mixtures utilizing the big-bag technique were used for all patients. Broviac or Hickman catheters were implanted in 35 patients and an infusion port in 2. Infusions were administered during the night for 8-12 hours with a volumetric pump. 14 patients are still receiving HTPN (39%) while in 8 it was discontinued as they can maintain their nutritional status by the gastrointestinal route (22%). 14 patients have died (39%), 3 from HTPN-related causes (2 of sepsis and 1 of liver failure). Catheter-related sepsis was 0.42/year of HTPN. Other common complications were metabolic bone disease, deranged liver function and cholecystolithiasis. 80% were able to return to work, school, or housekeeping activities, or at least to take care of themselves and cope with HTPN unaided. Social rehabilitation was full or partial in 72% and only 29% were house-bound and needed major assistance. Patients with a poor life quality tended to be older and suffer from intestinal diseases as a manifestation of a systemic disorder, such as atherosclerosis or malignancy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A decade of experience with home total parenteral nutrition]. 180 Feb 76

In case of short bowel syndrome in infancy the total parenteral nutrition was complicated by catheter-associated Candida parapsilosis septicemia based on generalized enterococci infection. Specific problems in antifungal treatment are discussed.
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PMID:[Candida parapsilosis infection as a complication of long-term parenteral nutrition]. 190 64

During an 11-year period, 41 patients with Crohn's disease were placed on home parenteral nutrition (HPN) for a mean of 1,083 days (range: 33 to 3,258 days). Data were retrospectively analyzed to determine whether HPN had an effect on the course of their disease, i.e., on the number of operative procedures performed and the intensity of required medical therapy. Data represented information obtained during a total of 121 patient-years of HPN for Crohn's disease. The main indications for HPN were short bowel syndrome (66%) and high stoma output. Twenty-four of 41 patients (59%) underwent surgery for Crohn's disease during the course of HPN. There was no significant difference between the number of procedures performed per patient per year of Crohn's disease during pre-HPN and HPN periods (p greater than 0.25). Although there was no significant change in body weight, both serum albumin and transferrin levels increased during HPN (p less than 0.01 and p less than 0.01, respectively). Twenty-nine percent of patients were taking prednisone while on HPN, compared with 54% of patients during the pre-HPN period (p less than 0.01). HPN appeared to result in a significant improvement in the numerically assessed quality of life. During the HPN period, 24 patients had 1 or more HPN-related complications that required 1 to 13 hospital admissions (mean: 1.8). These complications included catheter sepsis in 19 patients, blocked or damaged catheters in 15 patients, and dehydration and/or electrolyte imbalance in 5 patients. Eight patients died, with 7% of deaths secondary to catheter-related sepsis. Although permanent HPN is associated with an identifiable morbidity and mortality and is not associated with a reduction in the frequency of surgery for Crohn's disease, benefits include a decrease in the intensity of medical therapy, an improvement in patients' nutritional state, and a significant perceived improvement in patients' quality of life. Without HPN, we believe all patients would have died secondary to malnutrition and/or dehydration.
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PMID:A century of home parenteral nutrition for Crohn's disease. 197 2

Fifty out of 228 patients recorded on the U.K. Home Parenteral Nutrition Register have died. The earliest to die was at 10 days following the commencement of home parenteral nutrition (HPN), and the longest to die was after 5 1/2 years. Half of the patients who died, did so within 6 months of commencing HPN. Sixty % died of their underlying disease. Most patients with scleroderma or an underlying malignancy are dead within a year of commencing HPN. In contrast, patients with Crohn's disease or the short bowel syndrome due to volvulus do well. In only 14 patients was death attributable to the administration of HPN. In this group the main causes were septicemia, SVC thrombosis, and hepatic failure. Our study suggests that HPN should be used in patients with malignancy and scleroderma only in exceptional circumstances and that further work is necessary for the prevention of SVC thrombosis.
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PMID:Mortality in patients on home parenteral nutrition. 249 48

Gut transplantation is at a stage comparable to that of transplantation of the heart and liver in the late 1960s. The feasibility of this procedure has been demonstrated in large animals but has not been successful in clinical practice. Rejection, sepsis, and possible GVHD are the major obstacles. Ongoing clinical trials can be justified on the basis of the limited options that are available for patients with the short gut syndrome who develop complications while on TPN, the improved results in animals studies, the recent clinical success of pancreaticoduodenal transplantation, and the demonstrated ability to detect rejection and remove the intestinal graft without mortality (Table 1).
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PMID:Intestinal transplantation: current status. 265 Mar 91

Gastrointestinal injuries were noted in 53 children. Blunt trauma was responsible for 51 cases, and penetrating wounds in two. There were 42 boys and 11 girls (mean age, 8.1 years). The site of injury was the stomach (2), duodenum (17), jejunum (19), and ileum (15). Types of injury included two gastric perforations, 16 duodenal hematomas, one duodenal laceration, 27 jejunoileal perforations, five mesenteric avulsions, one abdominal wall laceration and evisceration, and one entrapment necrosis between lumbar vertebrae. Diagnosis was accomplished by observing free air on x-ray, with contrast (duodenal haematoma), computed tomography, and frequent examination (noting peritoneal irritation). Thirty-four associated injuries occurred in 21 patients (40%) including the liver (6), pancreas (6), skeletal injury (6), head trauma (5), diaphragm (4), lung (3), spleen (2), and kidney (2). Nine of 16 duodenal hematomas resolved non-operatively, while seven were evacuated during other procedures. Twenty-three of 30 perforations had simple closure, while seven (jejunoileal) were resected. Mesenteric avulsions required resection in five cases--the eviscerated bowel was replaced and the entrapped bowel resected. Twenty complications occurred in 13 patients, including atelectases (6), pseudocyst (5), sepsis (4), wound infection (2), subhepatic abscess (1), subglottic stenosis (1), and short bowel syndrome (1). One infant (aged 2 months) with a duodenal laceration died of head injuries (1/53 = 1.8% mortality). Prompt recognition and appropriate treatment result in improved survival.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal injuries in childhood: analysis of 53 patients. 273 26

This report concerns 60 infants and children with short bowel syndrome, most commonly caused by necrotizing enterocolitis in this study. Resection of atretic or gangrenous bowel was performed in 53 patients, tapering enteroplasty and primary anastomosis was performed in 13 patients, and temporary enterostomies were performed in 40 patients. Second-look laparotomy was useful in two of four cases of questionable bowel viability. The ileocecal valve was resected in 33 patients and remained intact in 27. The mean length of remaining bowel was 58.4 cm (range 13 to 150 cm). Seven patients with total aganglionosis and mid to proximal small bowel extension were managed with an initial enterostomy, whereas three had a pull-through procedure with an aganglionic patch enteroplasty. All patients received total parenteral nutrition and early enteral feedings. Home hyperalimentation was attempted when 50 percent of the calorie intake was enteral. Intestinal adaptation required from 3 to 14 months. Frequent setbacks were related to catheter sepsis, rotavirus infection, carbohydrate intolerance, and liver dysfunction. The overall survival rate was 85 percent, with mortality due to liver failure and sepsis associated with total parenteral nutrition.
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PMID:Short bowel syndrome in infancy and childhood. Analysis of survival in 60 patients. 308 Sep 21

One hundred two pediatric patients received all or part of their nutritional needs parenterally at home during the past decade. All received total parenteral nutrition (TPN) at night during an 8- to 12-h infusion. Patients with short bowel syndrome (33%), inflammatory bowel disease (23%), chronic intractable diarrhea (15%), chronic idiopathic intestinal pseudo-obstruction syndrome (10%), and malignancy (10%) made up the largest groups. The mean duration of parenteral support was 735 days (range, 90-3650 days); the mean number of catheters per patient was 2.1 (range, 1-8). Twenty-one patients continue to receive full or partial home TPN: four for more than 10 years and seven for more than 5 years. Fifty-one no longer require it and have had healing of mucosa or bowel adaptation. Complications related to administration of fluid and electrolytes were quite rare. Biotin deficiency was recognized once. Thirty-one have died, but only 13 deaths were related to TPN. Sepsis in nine and liver failure in two were the most common causes of death in the TPN-related group. Three of 21 still on home TPN have graduated either from high school or college. All but one of the school age children attend regular school; one attends a school for the medically disabled, another attends a school for the mentally gifted.
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PMID:Long-term home parenteral nutrition in pediatrics: ten years of experience in 102 patients. 309 47


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