Gene/Protein
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Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The first Thai case of Eales' disease with myelopathy is reported. This entity must be differentiated from other causes of myelopathy such as those due to infectious-inflammatory causes. The ophthalmologic findings are the most important diagnostic clues. Since many infectious diseases such as
tuberculosis
and dental
sepsis
may be potentially related to Eales' disease, and these infections are rather common in Thailand, the diagnosis of Eales' disease with neurological complications especially myelopathy should be looked for.
...
PMID:Eales' disease with myelopathy. 140 51
Four patients with acute paracoccidioidomycosis, hypoalbuminemia, ascites and associated infections are reported. They have been admitted to hospital 35 times, 4 of them due to active paracoccidioidomycosis, 14 to associated infections, 14 to ascites, edema and diarrhoea and 3 to herniorrhaphy. Two of them recovered after
sepsis
and central nervous system, muscular and subcutaneous cryptococcosis. The remaining two died. One had infectious diarrhoea (S. flexneri), peritoneal
tuberculosis
and
sepsis
(S. epidermidis); the other had bacterial meningitis, erysipelas, beta-hemolytic Streptococcus
sepsis
and miliary
tuberculosis
. Their immunodeficiency was attributed to enteric protein loss and/or malabsorption and malnutrition and was recognized by reduced response to delayed hypersensitivity skin tests in four patients and hypogammaglobulinemia in three of them. The authors discuss the need for prospective studies to be carried out, aiming at the mechanisms involved in secondary infections. Alternatives for maintaining the patients' adequate nutritional state should be investigated, to guarantee proper immune response and thus the ability to control intervening infections in patients with juvenile paracoccidioidomycosis.
...
PMID:Immunodeficiency secondary to juvenile paracoccidioidomycosis: associated infections. 148 Feb 6
The clinical features and results of laboratory investigations of the first 19 Indian patients with AIDS seen in our hospital are presented. Weight loss, fever, and diarrhea were the most common symptoms.
Tuberculosis
(TB) was the most common secondary infectious disease; among 13 patients, seven had only pulmonary TB, five had pulmonary and extrapulmonary TB, and one had only extrapulmonary TB. Oropharyngeal candidiasis was found in 11 patients. Other secondary infections were predominantly by virulent bacteria. Opportunistic infections other than candidiasis were infrequent; one patient had cryptococcosis, two had symptomatic cryptosporidiosis, one had noncoagulase-positive staphylococcus
septicemia
, and one had cytomegalovirus retinitis. Reduced lymphocyte counts (particularly of the CD4 subset), anemia, hypoalbuminemia, hyperglobulinemia, and elevated liver enzyme levels were frequent laboratory findings. Six patients are under follow-up, two are lost to follow-up, and 11 have died. Lymphocyte counts less than 500/mm3 were only seen in those patients who subsequently died. Response to antituberculosis therapy was good in several patients. Thus, the clinical profile of Indian patients with AIDS is not different from the common picture of patients of low socioeconomic and poor hygienic standards; patients presented with TB, undernutrition, and multiple infections. Therefore, a large population of patients with AIDS in India will not be recognized unless they are tested for evidence of HIV infection.
...
PMID:Clinical and laboratory profile of AIDS in India. 802 23
Despite the generally salutary experience in recent years of managing suppurative pleuropulmonary disease, empyemas and lung abscesses have persisted and increased in incidence in hospitals such as Queens Hospital Center that serve large numbers of the socioeconomically disadvantaged. This study documents the etiology, clinical presentation, treatment, and treatment results of suppurative pleuropulmonary disease at Queens Hospital Center, which serves a large segment of the urban poor, many of whom are black. Results indicate that contributory or antecedent etiologic factors include a history of prior disease (specifically pneumonia, lung abscess, obstructive lung disease, pulmonary neoplasia, and
tuberculosis
); a predisposition to constitutional or immunologic deficiencies (specifically, alcoholism, anemia/malnutrition, drug abuse, and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome [AIDS]); conditions contributing to tracheobronchial aspiration (specifically, alcoholism and seizure disorders); and a miscellaneous group such as prior surgery, cardiovascular disease, and
sepsis
syndrome. The patients in this study were young with maximal incidence occurring in the third to fifth decades of life. Patients were predominantly male (75%) and black (66%). There were 18 deaths (23%), with
sepsis
being the cause in 10 (56%). Most surgical interventions were conservative, ie, bronchoscopies (48), thoracenteses (43), and tube thoracotomies (39). Thirty-one open thoracotomies were performed for drainage, decortication, or pulmonary resection. The surgical mortality was three cases or 5% of the patients who underwent surgery. The designated incidence of proven AIDS in this series (29%) was low, undoubtedly because many patients refused testing, and the multiple gram-positive and gram-negative infections that were seen did not conform to the Centers for Disease Control criteria for diagnosis and case reporting for AIDS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The role of surgery in treating pleuropulmonary suppurative disease--review of 77 cases managed at Queens Hospital Center between 1986 and 1989. 160 13
A serosurvey and a tuberculination campaign have been conducted throughout Niger in 1989-1990 on cattle to measure the prevalence rate of six diseases: brucellosis (1.4%), haemorragic
septicemia
(3.9%),
tuberculosis
(2%), coxiellosis (15.4%), pleuropneumonia (3.7%), Rift Valley fever (0.52%). The results were analysed and compared to livestock service reports.
...
PMID:[Serological and allergological survey of cattle in Niger]. 181 52
A fourteen month old infant was admitted for evaluation because of continuous high fever and an indurated nodular lesion at the left thigh of one month course. After admittance painful inflammatory subcutaneous nodules appeared in the face and trunk, these were accompanied by enlarged cervical lymph nodes and hepatomegaly. Histological evaluation of the skin biopsy showed destruction of subcutaneous tissue, foamy cells, vasculitis and polymorphonuclear leukocyte infiltration; histiocytic proliferation in the lymph nodes and steatosis in the liver biopsy. Osteoarticular infection, cellulitis,
sepsis
,
tuberculosis
, collagen disease, and malignancies of hematologic origin were all ruled out. Response to treatment with prednisone was excellent and the patient has been asymptomatic along a one year follow up period.
...
PMID:[Weber-Christian disease]. 184 29
Many discriminative experimental animal models of infection have been utilized in the evaluation of newer fluoroquinolones. In vivo efficacy of many of the newer agents has been shown in experimental models of meningitis, endocarditis, pneumonia, urinary tract infections, pyelonephritis, osteomyelitis, abscesses of various types, septic arthritis, gastroenteritis, salmonellosis, listeriosis,
tuberculosis
, syphilis, sinusitis, prostatitis and burn wound
sepsis
, among others. This review focuses on recent developments in a few selected areas. Although the limitations of animal model studies are well described, these results provide a rationale for the appropriate clinical usage of the newer fluoroquinolones in humans.
...
PMID:Evaluation of quinolones in experimental animal models of infections. 186 88
In the last two decades the incidence of
tuberculosis
in Austria has lowered very dramatically. So the danger of routineously made BCG-vaccinations in newborns got higher than the risk of Tbc-infections. The complications of BCG-vaccinations are: 1. severe local reactions (esp. purulent BCG-lymphadenitis), 2. BCG-osteomyelitis and 3. BCG-
sepsis
. The quantity of purulent lymphadenitis is dependent from the vaccine-type; "normal" vaccines cause 0.3%, the BCG-Pasteur Intradermal P-Vaccine caused 7.5%! Therefore the further use of this vaccine was forbidden. In Austria with January 1st 1990 the routineously vaccinations of the newborns was stopped, and since this date only special indications for BCG-vaccination are recommended (high risk of Tbc-infection).
...
PMID:[BCG vaccination]. 194 19
Patients with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) frequently develop hepatic dysfunction. Although hepatic injury may indirectly result from malnutrition, hypotension, administered medications,
sepsis
, or other conditions, the hepatic injury is frequently due to opportunistic hepatic infection, directly related to AIDS. Infection with Mycobacterium avium intracellulare typically occurs in patients with advanced immunocompromise and with systemic symptoms due to widely disseminated infection. In contrast, hepatic
tuberculosis
often occurs with less advanced immunocompromise. Cytomegaloviral infection may produce a hepatitis. Cytomegaloviral and cryptosporidial infections have been implicated as causes of acalculous cholecystitis and of a secondary sclerosing cholangitis. About 10-20% of patients with AIDS have chronic hepatitis B infection. These patients tend to develop minimal hepatic inflammation and necrosis. The clinical findings in patients with hepatic cryptococcal infection are usually due to concomitant extrahepatic infection. Hepatic histoplasmosis usually develops as part of a widely disseminated infection with systemic symptoms. Hepatic involvement by Kaposi's sarcoma is rarely documented ante mortem because an unguided liver biopsy is an insensitive diagnostic procedure. Patients with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma of the liver typically have lymphadenopathy, hepatomegaly, and systemic symptoms. As a pragmatic approach, patients with liver dysfunction and HIV-related disease should have a sonographic or computerized tomographic examination of the liver. Patients with dilated bile ducts should undergo endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography because opportunistic infection may produce biliary obstruction. Patients with a focal hepatic lesion should be considered for a guided liver biopsy. Patients with a significantly elevated serum alkaline phosphatase level should be considered for a percutaneous liver biopsy. When performed for these indications, liver biopsy will demonstrate a significant disease involving the liver in about 50% of patients with AIDS and in about 25% of patients who are HIV seropositive but who are not known to have AIDS. The clinical impact of a diagnostic biopsy is blunted by a lack of efficacious therapy for many opportunistic infections.
...
PMID:Hepatobiliary manifestations of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome. 198 33
The work analyses infectious complications after 35 orthotopic transplantations of the heart. The infectious complications are divided into 2 groups. Group 1 consisted of 6 patients with local complications. Group 2 was made up of 8 patients who died from bacterial infectious complications (mediastinitis 3,
sepsis
2), from miliary
tuberculosis
of the lungs 1, cytomegaloviral infection 1, and systemic candidiasis 1.
...
PMID:[Infectious complications following heart transplantation]. 201 67
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