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

A 66-year-old man suffering from high fever and abdominal pain was diagnosed as abdominal aortic pseudoaneurysm due to Salmonella enteritidis septicemia. After complete remission of infection with the antibiotic therapy, we performed a replacement of abdominal aorta with a prosthetic graft. Infection parameters are normal 5 months postoperatively. Although Salmonella septicemia is a serious disorder, it is not a rare infection recently as compromised host increases more. Rapid diagnosis, adequate antibiotic therapy and surgical treatment are essential for successful result of Salmonella aortic aneurysm.
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PMID:[A case of abdominal aortic pseudoaneurysm due to Salmonella enteritidis septicemia]. 155 94

A retrospective analysis of 69 case-reports of children with homozygous sickle cell anemia hospitalized from 1964 through 1985 at the Kinshasa University Pediatric Hospital highlights these patient's high susceptibility to bacterial septicemia. Among causative organisms, the most prevalent were salmonellae (20 cases), pneumococci (15 cases), and klebsiella (12 cases). Clinical features of bacterial septicemia are identical in children with and without sickle cell anemia. Bone and/or joint infections are usually found in salmonella septicemia and meningeal or pleuropulmonary localizations in pneumococcal septicemia. Eighteen children (26%) died, including 10 with pneumococcal septicemia (5 cases) and 10 with Salmonella septicemia (5 cases). Poor prognosis factors include resistance to commonly used antimicrobial agents, frequently found with Salmonella organisms, and concomitant meningeal infection.
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PMID:[Bacterial septicemias in children with homozygous sickle cell anemia. Analysis of 69 cases]. 274 15

Widespread use of antibiotics and change in pathogenesis altered the bacteriology of infected aortic aneurysms. In the past, bacterial endocarditis was the major source of emboli infecting the aorta. Now, gram-negative sepsis in elderly patients is often the initiating event of infection in atherosclerotic aneurysms. Four cases of gram-negative infection in aortic aneurysms were treated. The etiology, presentation, and surgical management are reviewed. Three abdominal aortic aneurysms were infected during urinary tract sepsis and one infection occurred with Salmonella septicemia. The clinical triad of fever, abdominal pain, and a pulsatile abdominal mass led to a preoperative diagnosis in three of four patients. Debridement of infected tissue and bypass through non-infected tissue planes remain the cornerstones of modern surgical management. Despite prompt diagnosis and proper surgical management, the mortality of gram-negative aortic infection remains high because of early rupture and extensive atherosclerotic disease.
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PMID:Gram-negative bacterial infection of aortic aneurysms. 329 84

To study the etiology of neonatal septicemia and factors associated with outcome, all charts of neonates with bacteremia and clinical sepsis admitted to a neonatal unit in Saudi Arabia, from 1 November 1980 to 31 October 1984 were reviewed. The results were compared to a previous study period in the unit (1 November 1976-31 October 1980). Septicemia was diagnosed on 50 occasions in 49 neonates. The incidence of neonatal sepsis among patients born in the hospital was 2.5/1,000 live births. Mortality from sepsis was 33% and was associated with neutropenia in 63%. The most commonly isolated bacteria were E. coli, Klebsiella and Staphylococcus aureus. Salmonella enteritidis serotypes were isolated in 4% of the cases. Group B streptococci (GBS) were isolated, for the first time, from blood of 3 neonates. Salmonella species were less frequently and GBS more often isolated than previously. GBS have now appeared as etiologic organisms in neonatal sepsis also in Saudi Arabia. Salmonella septicemia remains more common in Saudi Arabia than in the West.
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PMID:Changing etiology and outcome of neonatal septicemia in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. 352 8

We investigated the clinical efficiency and safety of ofloxacin, a new fluoroquinolone, for the treatment of various documented bacterial infections in 26 patients (10 females, 16 males) aged 17 to 84 years. Ofloxacin monotherapy was given orally in a dose of 200 mg twice (25) or three times (1) a day. Antibiotic levels and serum bactericidal activity were measured using a microbiological method on the second and sixth days, before and 2 and 6 hours after a single dose. The infectious episode treated was enterocolitis in 7 cases (5 Shigella, 2 Salmonella), Salmonella septicemia in 9 (7 typhoid fevers and 2 Salmonella minor infections), chronic osteoarthritis in 3 (1 E. coli, 2 S. aureus + P. aeruginosa), a soft tissue infection in 3 (2 S. aureus, 1 E. coli), acute pleuropneumonia in 2 (2 Klebsiella pneumoniae), pyelonephritis with bacteremia in 1 (Klebsiella pneumoniae), and pneumococcal pneumonia with septicemia in 1. Mean duration of therapy was ten days for 23 patients (range 7 to 30 days). The three patients with osteoarthritis were treated for 35, 95 and 270 days respectively. 24 patients recovered free of sequelae or germ carriage. Treatment failed in 1 case of chronic osteitis (S. aureus + P. aeruginosa) and in 1 staphylococcal soft tissue infection. No adverse reactions were observed except a slight increase in transaminases in 3 patients. Peak and through serum ofloxacin levels were 3.70 micrograms/ml and 0.95 micrograms/ml respectively on the second day and 3.25 micrograms/ml and 0.80 microgram/ml respectively on the sixth day.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Evaluation of the use of ofloxacin in the treatment of various infections]. 353 24

Of seven infants with Salmonella sepsis, three had meningitis. A review of these cases and others previously reported demonstrated that among infants less than 1 year old in Arkansas, Salmonella infection developed in 383 over a 31/2-year period. The reported incidence of sepsis and/or meningitis was 1.8%; for those less than 2 months of age, it was 5.0%. Epidemiologic investigation failed to disclose a consistent source of the Salmonella colonization for young infants. Treatment of meningitis with ampicillin sodium was frequently associated with relapse or clinical failure, while chloramphenicol or a chloramphenicol-ampicillin combination appeared to offer superior efficacy. Consideration should be given to antibiotics for the routine treatment of Salmonella gastroenteritis in infants less than 3 months of age.
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PMID:Salmonella sepsis in infancy. 731 4

In this study, 74 S.typhimurium septicemia cases were evaluated retrospectively from their records, and the age and sex distribution, presence of underlying disease, signs and symptoms, complete blood count, liver function tests and case fatality rate were documented and prognostic factors determined. It has been shown that S.typhimurium is the most common strain causing Salmonella septicemia, which is more fatal in the newborn period and in the presence of an associated disease, while hemoglobin and leukocyte counts do not play an important role in the prognosis. In Salmonella septicemia, congenital heart disease was the second-most common associated disease, which may be attributed to probable underlying immunodeficiency.
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PMID:Prognostic factors in Salmonella typhimurium septicemia. A 10-year retrospective study. 750 60

A 12-year review identified 21 patients with nontyphoidal, nonparatyphoidal salmonella septicemia. Eight of the patients had no predisposing factors. Factors identified included malignancy in five, recent surgery in four, alcoholism with aspiration pneumonia in two, chronic lung disease in two, diabetes in two, systemic lupus erythematosus in one and burns in one. Ten patients presented with gastroenteritis, two with localized abscesses, two with aspiration pneumonia and the remainder with nonspecific septicemia. Three patients died of underlying diseases and three died shortly after the septicemia of related causes. Six cases were nosocomial infection and were not related to hospital outbreaks. Salmonella septicemia with these serotypes is uncommon (1 per 14,000 admissions, 1 per 4000 blood cultures) and can occur in patients without diminished host resistance.
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PMID:Nontyphoidal, nonparatyphoidal salmonella septicemia in adults. 850 19

Ten pigeons were crop inoculated with 1 x 10(9) colony-forming units of Salmonella typhimurium var. Copenhagen and observed during 28 days. Ten sham-inoculated pigeons served as noninfected controls. Clinical signs after Salmonella infection consisted of polydipsia, polyuria, and diarrhea. Morbidity was 90%, but there was no mortality. All inoculated pigeons showed fecal excretion of Salmonella for at least 7 days. Biochemical analysis of plasma samples taken at 3-day intervals indicated decreased concentrations of creatine kinase (CK)-MM and CK-MB isoenzymes and elevated total protein and alpha- and gamma-globulin values. No consistent changes in the level of 17 other blood parameters were observed. After 28 days, all pigeons were necropsied. Gross lesions and bacteriologic and histologic examination indicated septicemia in all Salmonella-inoculated pigeons. Results indicate that Salmonella septicemia in pigeons induces only limited changes in biochemical blood parameters. Decreased CK concentration was a consistent finding, however, and may therefore be a useful aid in the diagnosis of salmonellosis in pigeons.
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PMID:Plasma biochemistry in pigeons experimentally infected with Salmonella. 1141 30

The authors report a case of a 36-week male infant born via spontaneous vaginal delivery who developed Salmonella sepsis at HRH Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn Medical Center Srinakharinwirot University, Nakhon Nayok, Thailand. He was born to a mother without identifiable risk factors. On day 3, he developed fever tachycardia, lethargy, poor feeding and diarrhea prompting a sepsis evaluation. Blood and stool cultures were positive for S. enterica serovar 4,5,12:i:-. Therefore, Salmonella infection should be considered in the differential diagnosis of early onset neonatal sepsis (EOS) particularly in endemic areas.
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PMID:Early Onset Neonatal Sepsis Due to Salmonella enterica Serovar 4,5,12:i:-: A Case Report with Literature Review. 2727 47


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