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

This is a report of the successful therapy of a case of Candida lusitaniae septicemia in a patient with short bowel syndrome who had been on home intravenous hyperalimentation for approximately 3 months when the infection developed. C. lusitaniae was isolated from multiple blood cultures taken over the course of 2 days.
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PMID:Candida lusitaniae septicemia in a patient on extended home intravenous hyperalimentation. 310 13

A cutaneous infection exposed the cuff of a Broviac catheter employed for home-TPN in a 3-month-old child with ultra-short bowel syndrome. In order to avoid removal of the catheter, sepsis was abated by antibiotic administration through its lumen, then the exposed cuff was covered and fixed by a skin flap. The advantages proceeding from this sort of "emergency rescue" of the Broviac catheter have been: (1) to avoid a new cutdown in a child already submitted to several attempts of cannulation with sacrifice of major vessels; (2) to resume home total parenteral nutrition (TPN) in a short time, being the patient strictly dependent upon his parenteral intake and to spare a well-functioning catheter. Ten months after the last cuff covering by skin flap, the catheter is safely fixed in place and currently employed for home TPN.
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PMID:Repeated rescue of a Broviac catheter: fixation of exposed cuff by a skin flap. 311 96

One hundred and sixty three children who received total parenteral nutrition (TPN), including 7 cases of short bowel syndrome, were studied to evaluate the role of TPN in the management of infants with extremely short bowel. Three of the seven were died of sepsis related with central venous catheter (CV catheter) during the period of malabsorption when TPN was necessary. Two children of other diseases were died of catheter sepsis, 5 out of 163 in total, making the mortality late of TPN 3%. Incidence of CV catheter related complications was significantly less frequent in Broviac catheter when compared with conventional Silastic catheter (p less than 0.01). Another significant complication of TPN in cases of short bowel syndrome was hepatic dysfunction. Cholestatic liver dysfunction seemed to be cleared when enteral feeding was started even with TPN going on. Oral feeding should be started in the early postoperative period with concomitant TPN covering the fluid loss. A case of copper deficiency with high output jejunostomy and a case of urolithiasis with hyperoxaluria complicated with short bowel were reported.
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PMID:[Long-term TPN for short bowel syndrome]. 314 68

Despite the recent advent of total parenteral nutrition (TPN), the long-term survival of the patients with short gut syndrome is not satisfactory with complications of catheter-related sepsis and cholestasis. The causes of short gut syndrome in pediatric surgery are multiple intestinal atresias, necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), and midgut volvulus. For the multiple atresias, multiple anastomosis without resection has been successfully undertaken to avoid developing short gut syndrome for the last 17 years. For the massive involvement of the intestines due to NEC or volvulus, high jejunostomy and peritoneal drainage with TPN support have been tried for the last two patients and successfully weaned from the TPN within two months after closure of jejunostomy. However, in case 2 malabsorption has been persistent presumably due to a severe degree of mucosal damage occurring in the remaining intestines. Whether this eventually gets back to the normal or not is unknown. For the patients with short gut syndrome, small bowel reversal procedure was successfully done and now doing well 10 years after surgery. This paper reports details of these 3 cases.
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PMID:[Surgical managements of massive involvement of small bowel and of short gut syndrome]. 322 90

One hundred twenty-five infants underwent surgical intervention for necrotizing enterocolitis between 1972 and 1984. Sixty-three infants, who survived more than 30 days postoperatively, were evaluated for long-term complications. There were 28 girls and 35 boys (mean birth weight 1,725 +/- 890 g; gestational age 32 +/- 4 weeks). Associated problems included hyaline membrane disease (43), cardiac anomalies (25), and trisomy 21(2). Thirty-six survivors required long-term ventilatory support. Fifty-nine infants underwent bowel resection and enterostomy, 3 decompressing enterostomies without resection, and 1, exploratory laparotomy only. Enterostomies were closed at four months. Twenty four had short bowel syndrome. Fifteen infants subsequently died for a late mortality rate of 23%. Mortality was related to sepsis (3), respiratory failure (5), cardiac anomalies (3), cardio-respiratory arrest (2), and TPN related liver failure (2), and was common with gestational age less than 31 weeks and birth weight less than 1,000 g. Medical problems included cholestasis (17), TPN induced cirrhosis (3), meningitis (3), seizures (8), and nutritional rickets (6). Significant developmental and intellectual delays were observed.
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PMID:Long-term follow-up after surgical management of necrotizing enterocolitis: sixty-three cases. 372 6

Streptococcus bovis bacteremia has been associated with several gastrointestinal disorders, most notably carcinoma of the colon. This report describes a 57-year-old woman with short bowel syndrome in whom S. bovis bacteremia and an infection of an indwelling parenteral nutrition catheter developed. A barium enema revealed diverticula and a foreshortened small intestine. This case implicates the short bowel syndrome in the pathogenesis of S. bovis bacteremia and supports empiric antibiotic coverage for both skin flora and enteric pathogens in patients with Hickman catheter sepsis and known gastrointestinal pathologic conditions.
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PMID:Streptococcus bovis catheter infection and the short bowel syndrome. 396 50

Between 1971 and 1984 58 neonates were operated on because of bowel obstructing intestinal malformations. The most significant postoperative complications were cardiac insufficiency (7), mechanical bowel obstruction (5), sepsis (4), short bowel syndrome (3), respiratory insufficiency or pneumonia (3), anastomotic leak (2) or stenosis (1), bleeding (2), bowel infarction (1). Overall mortality: 15/58 (26%).
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PMID:[Intestinal abnormalities as a cause of ileus in the newborn infant]. 405 62

An elemental diet was used to prepare 11 severely debilitated malnourished patients for operation. Indications included: 1) as a substitute for parenteral hyperalimentation when catheter sepsis occurred with the latter; 2) high small fistulae; 3) short bowel syndrome; 4) radiation enteritis; and 5) partial obstruction of the gastrointestinal tract. All patients were converted to a positive nitrogen balance as evidenced by a substantial gain in weight and in serum albumin levels. All tolerated corrective operations without difficulty and their wounds healed per primum.
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PMID:Use of elemental diets to correct catabolic states prior to surgery. 420 17

The effect of total parenteral nutrition (TPN) as sole therapy was studied in 30 consecutive cases of complicated Crohn's disease. After insertion of a Broviac-type central venous catheter patients were nourished parenterally for 3 weeks in the hospital and then for an additional 9 weeks at home. During this time no medication or oral intake was allowed. Surgery was avoided in 25 patients by TPN. These patients returned to work, ate normal meals and needed no medical support. In 5 cases it was not possible to control the acute disease and the patients were treated by resection. During TPN, catheter-related sepsis occurred in 3 patients (0.9 cases/1000 days TPN) and catheter embolism in 2. Four other patients developed intrahepatic cholestasis. A relapse of Crohn's disease was observed in 17 cases 3-48 months after the course of TPN. The cumulative recurrence rate is 60 per cent after 2 years and 85 per cent after 4 years. Compared with the results of resection, obtained from a 10-year period before TPN was instituted at our hospital, the cumulative recurrence rate after TPN is four times higher. It is concluded that TPN is not an alternative to resection in the treatment of Crohn's disease and should be reserved for patients with multifocal lesions, when surgery is not advisable because of the risk of a short bowel syndrome.
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PMID:Total parenteral nutrition as the sole therapy in Crohn's disease--a prospective study. 640 50

More than 100 patient-years' experience has been acquired in the treatment of 133 patients with ambulatory home total parenteral nutrition (TPN) between May 1974 and December 1983. Indications for chronic or permanent home TPN include short bowel syndrome, malabsorption, scleroderma, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide syndrome. Indications for acute or temporary home TPN include Crohn's disease, malignancies, gastrointestinal fistulas, ulcerative colitis, anorexia nervosa, and numerous other disorders. Eighty-two patients in the acute group were treated primarily with percutaneously placed standard subclavian catheters and 51 patients in the chronic group have been treated thus far with implanted silicone rubber, Dacron-cuffed catheters for a cumulative total of 38,939 patient days. Of the 125 implanted catheters, 115 were placed in the superior vena cava and ten in the inferior vena cava for an average duration of 250 catheter-days, the longest single catheter remaining in situ for more than 8 1/2 years. Catheter-related sepsis occurred 33 times with the implanted catheters, or once every 2.6 catheter-years. One hundred and fourteen temporary catheters were placed percutaneously in the superior vena cava via a subclavian vein for an average duration of 68 days, the longest single catheter remaining in situ for 213 days. Catheter-related sepsis occurred seven times, equivalent to one episode per 3 catheter-years. Total catheter-related complications were quite infrequent and were directly related to duration of catheterization. They included venous thrombosis (12), clotted catheter (11), catheter failure or rupture (8), catheter compression (5) and inadvertent catheter removal (4). Twenty-six catheters were repaired or spliced in situ when the external segment was accidentally damaged or deteriorated secondary to long-term material fatigue. One remarkable patient has been maintained exclusively by TPN originally as an inpatient and subsequently as an outpatient for the entire 13 years of his life.
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PMID:100 patient-years of ambulatory home total parenteral nutrition. 642 31


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