Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Out of 38 leukaemic cases only 16 had extensive leukaemic infiltration at death. 15 patients had slight or moderate and 7 no infiltration at all. 12 of the 15, and 5 of the 7 died with septicaemia. The latter patients must have died of complications rather than of the leukaemia itself. Although it has been possible to reduce the incidence of septicaemia during life, terminal septicaemia does not yet seem to be preventable. Septicaemia was revealed at autopsy in 27 of 38 patients; 25 of these also had clinical signs of septicaemia before death. Necrotizing gastrointestinal lesions may cause endogenous infection. In the present material, almost every second patient had fungal septicaemia. Out of 7 patients having oral candidiasis in vivo 5 had systemic candidiasis at autopsy, but only half of the patients with systemic candidiasis had visible oral growth. Modern treatment of leukaemia seems to be able to prevent intracranial haemorrhage in 90% of the cases. On the other hand, vacuolization of muscle and liver tissue was a frequent finding in leukaemia. It is suggested as being caused by fatty degeneration. Vacuolization of myocardial cells was found in 7 out of 13 cases. Among these 7, 4 had had intermittent hypokalaemia.
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PMID:Autopsy findings in leukaemia. 99 42

Cardiac pathologic findings were analyzed in 22 necropsy cases from a series of 29 patients with leukemia, aplastic anemia, or metastatic cancer who had been treated with ablative therapy followed by bone marrow transplantation. Some cardiac alterations were similar to those that occur in patients with hematologic and neoplastic diseases not treated with bone marrow transplantation, and consisted of cardiomegaly, cardiac atrophy, hemorrhage, foci of necrosis due to shock associated with sepsis or hepatic failure, myocardial abscesses secondary to systemic candidiasis or staphylococcal infection, fibrinous pericarditis, and hemosiderosis. Other cardiac alterations were more specifically related to factors associated with transplantation procedure. Six patients exhibited a distinctive interstitial reactive change characterized by the presence of (1) moderate to large numbers of Anitschkow cells, occurring alone or in small cellular aggregates and histiocytes, histiocytic cells with nuclei of the Anitschkow type, lymphoid cells, and plasma cells, and (2) nuclei of the Anitschkow type in cardiac vascular and endocardial smooth muscle, endothelial and Schwann cells, and occasional cardiac muscle cells. This alteration may have been induced by abnormal immune mechanisms, as suggested by the observation that five of the six patients with interstitial change had clinical evidence of graft-versus-host disease. Two patients developed fatal congestive cardiac failure in the early post-transplant period and exhibited myocardial damage with histologic and post-transplant period features indicative of severe acute injury. Findings in these two patients consisted of necrotic muscle cells, which exhibited multiple contraction bands, diastase-resistant PAS staining, and intracellular fibrin deposits; microthrombi, which were composed of fibrin and occasionally of fibrin and platelets; and extravasated erythrocytes and fibrin strands in the interstitium. One of the two patients also exhibited unusual nuclear alterations, which were characterized by replacement of normal chromatin by palely stained fibrous and filamentous material. Clinicopathologic analysis strongly suggested that the fatal cardiotoxicity in both patients resulted primarily from effects of high doses of cyclophosphamide, which were administered as part of a four drug regimen that provided tumor ablation and immunosuppression for bone marrow transplantation. Our findings emphasize the need for less toxic antineoplastic and immunosuppressive therapy for use in bone marrow transplantation procedures.
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PMID:Cardiac pathologic findings in patients treated with bone marrow transplantation. 110 69

Septicaemia still presents a major diagnostic and therapeutic challenge to the clinician. Most cases are hospital-acquiredand the reasons for their increasing prevalence are discussed, with reference to predisposing factors and opportunistic infections. The pathology and bacteriology of proven cases (positive blood cultures) in 1974 in a modern children's and maternity hospital complex are presented. Gram-positive and Gram-negative varieties are compared and the molecular biology and mechansims of endo- and exotoxaemia described. Successful therapy demands correct choice of antibiotic and the development of shock requires skilled supportive measures. For the former a rational scheme is outlined and a plea is made for collection of data for this purpose. Polypharmacy is deprecated and either an aminoglycoside or a cephalosporin forms the mainstay of therapy. The emergence of Bacteroids sp. in cases of abdominal and puerperal sepsis necessitates addition of a lincomycin or metronidazole. Superinfection with systemic candidiasis requires 5-fluorocytosine.
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PMID:Septicaemia. 112 91

In two premature newborns affected by candida sepsis we observed at ultrasonography alterations of the heart and of the anterior cerebral artery. These alterations suggest a cardiovascular involvement that is rarely reported in the literature as a complication of systemic candidiasis.
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PMID:[Vascular lesions in Candida albicans sepsis]. 147 75

The incidence of opportunistic infections after thermal injury is high. Since 1985, we have been practicing Candida prophylaxis using nystatin "swish-and-swallow" and topical therapy. Patients treated between 1980 and 1984 served as controls and received no Candida prophylaxis. Although mean burn size, full-thickness injury, and age were comparable, the incidence of Candida colonization (26.7% vs 15.6%), infection (21.3% vs 10.0%), and sepsis (12.2% vs none) was significantly different between control and nystatin-treated groups, respectively. With prophylaxis, the incidence of Candida wound infection has been significantly reduced, and systemic candidiasis has been eradicated, eliminating the need for toxic systemic antifungal agents.
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PMID:Candida infection with and without nystatin prophylaxis. A 11-year experience with patients with burn injury. 154 92

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.
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PMID:[Infectious complications following heart transplantation]. 201 67

We analysed 7 cases of systemic candida sp. infection diagnosed between 1986 to 1989. Clinical presentation was of sepsis. Evolution was favorable in all, excepting two cases that died due to a candidiasic meningitis and a candidiasic aortic thrombosis, respectively. Almost all patients were treated with amphotericin B only. A newborn had signs of toxicity (thrombocytopenia). We emphasize the importance of a prompt diagnosis and treatment and the effectivity of amphotericin B for systemic candidiasis, besides of its rare toxicity in newborns.
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PMID:[Neonatal systemic candidiasis]. 207 91

20 patients (18 men, 2 women), 10 of whom were HIV +, were given Fluconazole (F) for either systemic candidiasis (13 cases), histoplasmosis (1), or cryptococcosis (6). The localization of the Candida infections (12 C. albicans, 1 C. tropicalis), were: septicemic (2), urinary (7), bronchial (2), esophageal (5), uveal (1), soft tissue (2), and 1 undetermined localization but a positive serology (1). On day (d) 1, Candidiasis patients were given an initial dose of 400 mg (for septicemia) or 200 mg (other localizations) of FIV or PO, then 200 or 100 mg per d. The length of treatment lasted from 28 to 70 d. Evolution was favorable in all the patients. 4 relapses occurred after the end of treatment: at 10 d, a septicemic candidiasis (C. tropicalis) in 1 patient who had prosthetic endocarditis; and at 1 month, digestive candidiasis in 3 HIV + patients. For the patient, infected by Histoplasma capsulatum, despite a clinical improvement, urine were still positive at day 75. The patients with cryptococcosis (5 meningitidis in the AIDS patients) and renal (1) (kidney transplant) were given on the average 400 mg a d, IV or PO (mean length 8 weeks). Only 5 patients were evaluable. For 2 of the meningitis patients with other localizations, standard treatment was instituted due to the persistence of positive cultures. For the 2 other patients, the cerebrospinal fluid (1) and the urine (1) were sterilized by the 3d week. But they relapsed 1 month after the treatment stopped. For the 18 patients evaluable, clinical and biological tolerance was good except for 1 patient with transaminases rise for which fluconazole was probably the cause.
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PMID:[Value of fluconazole in the treatment of systemic yeast infection]. 255 80

This study is based on the analysis of 44 cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples from 11 patients with central nervous system (CNS) Candida infection. Risk factors for CNS fungal infection were present in all patients. Five had a chronic meningitis syndrome; two had acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS); two had cranial trauma followed by chronic meningities; one had intravascular disseminated coagulation syndrome and sepsis; and one had systemic candidiasis after kidney transplant. Etiological diagnosis was made in all by the CSF examination. Nine cases had positive CSF culture for Candida. Two patients presented the yeast in the direct examination, and one of them had reagent complement fixation test for Candida in three successive samples of CSF. Changes found in the CSF composition are discussed in order to evaluate the inflammatory response to CNS infection by Candida.
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PMID:[Cerebrospinal fluid in infection of the central nervous system by yeasts of the genus Candida: analysis of 11 cases]. 261 11

A full-term male neonate, weighing 2540 g at birth, was admitted to hospital on day 2 because of vomiting and severe dehydration. Duodeno-duodenostomy was performed on day 5 for congenital duodenal atresia. The child was well postoperatively until day 9, when he developed fever. Intermittent fever continued despite treatment with several antibiotics. He became seriously ill on day 15 and developed disseminated intravascular coagulation. Treatment with antifungal drugs (amphotericin B and 5-flucytosine) was effective for systemic candidiasis, but candida endophthalmitis developed. There was a persistent vitreous lesion in the left eye, which after cessation of therapy has been improving gradually. Systemic candidiasis and candida endophthalmitis should be considered in neonates who develop signs of sepsis postoperatively.
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PMID:Systemic candidiasis with DIC and candida endophthalmitis in a postoperative neonate. 269 30


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