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

Partial splenectomy was performed on 12 patients with thalassemia (9 beta-thalassemia major and 3 Hb H disease) to reduce blood transfusion requirements. The indication for partial splenectomy was the presence of splenomegaly and increased blood transfusion requirements (i.e. Hb drop > 0.5 g per week). Their ages ranged from 3 to 10 years (mean 6.9 years). On follow-up, ranging from 1.1-5.5 years (mean 2.6 years), two of the three patients with Hb H disease required no more blood transfusions while the third continued to receive blood transfusions, but at a lower frequency. For those with beta-thalassemia major, the transfusion requirements and Hb drop per week decreased in the majority of patients. This is specially so during the first 1-2 years following partial splenectomy. In all, about 1/3 of the size of the normal spleen was preserved (either upper or lower pole) which was judged functional as there has been no significant infection in any of the patients, no change in IgM level, no Howell-Jolly bodies and visualization on scintigraphy. Partial splenectomy is recommended to start with for those with Hb H disease. For patients with beta-thalassemia major, partial splenectomy is beneficial as a temporary measure and in those children who are less than 5 years of age, as they are at greater risk of post splenectomy sepsis.
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PMID:The role of partial splenectomy in children with thalassemia. 992

The recent discovery of the specific molecular defects in many patients with hereditary spherocytosis and hereditary elliptocytosis/pyropoikilocytosis partially clarifies the molecular pathology of these diseases. HE and HPP are caused by defects in the horizontal interactions that hold the membrane skeleton together, particularly the critical spectrin self-association reaction. Single gene defects cause red cells to elongate as they circulate, by a unknown mechanism, and are clinically harmless. The combination of two defective genes or one severe alpha spectrin defect and a thalassaemia-like defect in the opposite allele (alphaLELY) results in fragile cells that fragment into bizarre shapes in the circulation, with haemolysis and sometimes life-threatening anaemia. A few of the alpha spectrin defects are common, suggesting they provide an advantage against malaria or some other threat. HS, in contrast, is nearly always caused by family-specific private mutations. These involve the five proteins that link the membrane skeleton to the overlying lipid bilayer: alpha and beta spectrin, ankyrin, band 3 and protein 4.2. Somehow, perhaps through loss of the anchorage band 3 provides its lipid neighbours (Peters et al, 1996), microvesiculation of the membrane surface ensues, leading to spherocytosis, splenic sequestration and haemolysis. Future research will need to focus on how each type of defect causes its associated disease, how the spleen aggravates membrane skeleton defects (a process termed 'conditioning'), how defective red, cells are recognized and removed in the spleen, and why patients with similar or even identical defects can have different clinical severity. Emphasis also needs to be given to improving diagnostic tests, particularly for HS, and exploring new options for therapy, like partial splenectomy, which can ameliorate symptoms while better protecting patients from bacterial sepsis and red cell parasites, and perhaps from atherosclerosis (Robinette & Franmeni, 1977) and venous thrombosis (Stewart et al, 1996).
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PMID:Red blood cell membrane disorders. 1105 1

We report a case of Yersinia enterocolitica sepsis syndrome and the acute respiratory distress syndrome in a chronically transfused adolescent with beta-thalassemia. This manifestation of serious Y. enterocolitica infection has not previously been reported. Dyspnea, hypoxia, and fever were the principal features of the clinical presentation. The acute onset of respiratory symptoms occurred after appendectomy. Chest radiographs revealed frontal bilateral infiltrates and alveolar consolidation to three quadrants. Y. enterocolitica was identified from blood and intraoperative appendix cultures. Although there was no need for mechanical ventilation, a remarkable persistence of clinical and X-ray findings was noted. Therapy with high levels of oxygen, and intravenous amikacin and piperacillin/tazobactam led to a favorable outcome.
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PMID:ARDS in a patient with homozygous beta-thalassemia due to yersiniosis. 1065 28

A case-control study was conducted in four hospitals in northeastern Thailand to identify risk factors for melioidosis and bacteremic melioidosis. Cases were patients with culture-proven melioidosis, and there were two types of controls (those with infections, i.e., with community-acquired septicemia caused by other bacteria, and those without infection, i.e., randomly selected patients admitted with noninfectious diseases to the same hospitals). Demographic data, clinical presentations, and suspected risk factors were analyzed. Diabetes mellitus, preexisting renal diseases, thalassemia, and occupational exposure, classified by the soil and water risk assessment, were confirmed to be significant risk factors for melioidosis and bacteremic melioidosis. Only diabetes mellitus was a significant factor associated with bacteremic melioidosis, as compared with nonbacteremia. A significant interaction was found between diabetes mellitus and occupational exposure. Thus, diabetic rice farmers would be the most appropriate population group for targeted control measures such as vaccination in the future.
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PMID:Risk factors for melioidosis and bacteremic melioidosis. 1047 50

Intractable bilateral exudative pleural effusions developed, following systemic sepsis without pulmonary infection, in a beta-thalassemia intermedia patient with longstanding mediastinal hematopoietic masses. The pleura were not infiltrated by hematopoietic cells. Bilateral talc pleurodesis successfully controlled the effusions.
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PMID:Bilateral pleural effusions in a beta-thalassemia intermedia patient with posterior mediastinal extramedullary hematopoietic masses. 1049 Jan 37

A 19-year-old splenectomized, multitransfused female patient with beta-thalassaemia major developed primary meningitis due to P. putida. Her blood cultures were negative. P. putida is an unusual nosocomial organism to cause primary meningitis. Infection due to this organism carries high mortality. However, owing to early diagnosis and energetic treatment this patient survived without any sequelae. A review of serious infections over the last 7 years in patients in our thalassaemia care centre revealed 11 serious infections among our splenectomized patients (n = 46) and none in the non-splenectomized group (n = 106). Surprisingly, all overwhelming infections (23.8% in the splenectomized group) were caused by Gram-negative bacilli like Klebsiella, Pseudomonas, Aeromonas and Campylobacter species. As all our splenectomized patients had prior pneumococcal vaccination and oral penicillin prophylaxis, overwhelming septicaemia due to S. Pneumoniae was successfully prevented, but an increasing incidence of overwhelming sepsis due to Gram-negative bacilli, against which no vaccination or suitable prophylactic antibiotics are available, is now posing a new threat to this vulnerable group of patients.
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PMID:Primary pseudomonas meningitis in an adult, splenectomized, multitransfused thalassaemia major patient. 1084 29

Infection is a major complication and the leading cause of death in thalassemia, especially E-beta thalassemia. The spectrum of infections in E-beta thalassemia include mild and severe infections, therapy-related infections such as Yersinia enterocolitica infection associated with desferrioxamine (DFO) therapy, and transfusion-transmitted disease, as well as unique infections such as with pythiosis. Prospective studies in Thailand indicate that patients with E-beta thalassemia had more frequent episodes of both mild and severe infections. The former included upper respiratory tract infection, acute gastroenteritis, cutaneous abscess, and gingivitis. Severe infections occurred more commonly in patients with splenectomy and included septicemia, pneumonia, biliary tract infection, salmonellosis, and urinary tract infection. Responsible organisms were Escherichia coli (26%), Klebsiella pneumoniae (23%), Salmonella (15%), and Streptococcus pneumoniae (13%). Other organisms included Pseudomonas, Staphylococci, Burkholderia pseudomallei (melioidosis), and Aeromonas. Patients undergoing DFO therapy are at risk for Y. enterocolitica infection which may be localized to mesenteric nodes and tonsils or occur as a generalized form such as septicemia. Recently, we have seen a unique infection so-called vascular pythiosis. Patients usually presented with clinical features of vascular occlusion of lower limbs from ascending arteritis and thrombosis. The causative organism, Pythium insidiosum, is fungus-like, in the kingdom Stramenopila, and in the class Oomycetes. The mortality rate is high and the only effective treatment has been early amputation or possibly immunotherapy. The predisposing factors of infections in thalassemia include splenectomy, iron overload, anemia, and granulocyte dysfunctions. General management of infections in thalassemia consist of prevention, i.e., immunization with pneumococcal and hepatitis vaccines, oral penicillins especially in patients with splenectomy, removal of predisposing factors such as gallstones, iron overload, and appropriate antibiotics.
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PMID:Infections in E-beta thalassemia. 1113 34

Absence of the spleen or splenic function predisposes individuals to risk of overwhelming infection. These infections are most often due to encapsulated organisms, especially pneumococcus, Haemophilus influenzae type b, and meningococcus, but any bacterial agent may cause the rapid onset of septicemia, meningitis, pneumonia, and shock characteristic of the asplenic-hyposplenic condition. The risk is greatest in infants and young children, but asplenic-hyposplenic adults also have an increased risk of infection. Prophylactic antibiotics and immunization with polyvalent pneumococcal, H. influenzae type b, and meningococcal vaccines have reduced the incidence of infections in asplenic-hyposplenic individuals, but even these measures have not eliminated the risk. Surgeons have adopted techniques to save as much splenic tissue as possible and some splenic functions, such as pitting red cells, have been preserved, but conservative surgery has not provided total protection against overwhelming infection. Therapies designed to interrupt the cascade of overwhelming sepsis have not yet been successful. In those cases in which the spleen is surgically removed, the underlying disease or condition leading to splenectomy influences the risk of sepsis. Splenectomy incidental to other operations, such as gastrectomy, results in the lowest risk for overwhelming infection, but this is still some 35-fold greater than the risk for overwhelming infections in the general population. In increasing order of risk, the other main indications for surgical removal of the spleen are idiopathic thrombocytopenia purpura, trauma, transplantation procedures, hereditary spherocytosis, staging Hodgkin's disease, portal hypertension with hypersplenism, and thalassemia. Pathologists should comment on the risk of overwhelming sepsis when spleens are processed as surgical specimens, and should carefully weigh all splenic tissue, including accessory spleens and splenic implants (splenosis), in autopsy cases with and without overwhelming sepsis.
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PMID:Asplenic-hyposplenic overwhelming sepsis: postsplenectomy sepsis revisited. 1117 26

We report a case of transfusion-mediated Yersinia enterocolitica septicemia in a 43-y-old woman with homozygous beta-thalassemia. Two h after transfusion of 3 units of red blood cells the patient suffered high-grade fever and shaking chills. Y. enterocolitica serotype O3 grew in blood cultures. Prolonged treatment with i.v. ceftriaxone plus ciprofloxacin led to a favorable outcome. Transfusion-associated Y. enterocolitica septicemia has not previously been reported in an adult beta-thalassemic patient from the Mediterranean area. Our report is particularly important, because of the high incidence of chronically transfused thalassemic patients in Mediterranean countries.
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PMID:Transfusion-mediated Yersinia enterocolitica septicemia in an adult patient with beta-thalassemia. 1176 Jan 71

Bacteremia due to Plesiomonas shigelloides was associated with rapidly fulminant septicemia, disseminated intravascular coagulation and massive adrenal hemorrhage in a splenectomized patient suffering from thalassemia intermedia who was treated with hydroxyurea. P. shigelloides was isolated in blood cultures; despite a vigorous combination of antibiotics the patient died after 24 h in the ICU. Lethal sepsis due to P. shigelloides has not previously been reported in Greece.
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PMID:Plesiomonas shigelloides sepsis in a thalassemia intermedia patient. 1237 63


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