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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 52-year-old man was complicated with a left subphrenic abscess after total pancreatectomy and gastrectomy for advanced
pancreatic cancer
. A left subphrenic silicon tube penetrated the diaphragm and the bottom of the left lung as well, causing a bronchial fistula with bilateral aspiration pneumonia. Then bronchoscopically, the fistula was successfully treated by packing a few pieces of oxidized cellulose into the affected bronchus. One month later the patient died of
sepsis
due to multiple liver abscess. On autopsy, the bronchial fistula and any active inflammation were not recognized in the left lower lung area.
...
PMID:[Oxidized cellulose occlusion of a peripheral bronchial fistula communicating to the left subphrenic abscess]. 143 99
We investigated the imbalance between thrombin and plasmin activity in vivo with various grades of severity of disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) in relation to the underlying diseases. Plasma thrombin-antithrombin-III complex (TAT) and plasmin-alpha 2-antiplasmin complex (PAP) levels were measured in 133 blood samples obtained from patients with DIC. The TAT/PAP ratio was higher in patients with
sepsis
or solid cancer than in those with hematologic malignancies. In acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL), the TAT levels were the highest, but the PAP levels were even higher and the TAT/PAP ratio was the lowest. As for the severity of DIC, in mild DIC, both thrombin and plasmin activities were increased. In moderate DIC, the TAT/PAP ratio increased, and thrombin activity was much more predominant. However, in severe DIC, the ratio decreased, and plasmin activity became excessive. In 3 patients with acute myeloblastic leukemia, APL and
pancreatic cancer
, respectively, the PAP level remained high during heparin therapy although the TAT level was decreased. When tranexamic acid was given, the PAP level was selectively reduced, and the TAT/PAP ratio was markedly decreased along with clinical improvement. These results indicate that monitoring of the TAT/PAP ratio may contribute to decisions regarding the institution and performance of combination therapy for DIC using anticoagulants and antifibrinolytic agents.
...
PMID:Imbalance between thrombin and plasmin activity in disseminated intravascular coagulation. Assessment by the thrombin-antithrombin-III complex/plasmin-alpha-2-antiplasmin complex ratio. 146 20
A prospective neoadjuvant trial utilizing chemotherapy (CTX) and radiotherapy (XRT) prior to pancreatectomy was established to determine the feasibility of resection after aggressive pretreatment and its effect on survival. Fifteen patients with
pancreatic cancer
(14 head, 1 body) and 1 patient with duodenal cancer, (with paraaortic adenopathy), were subjected to combination treatment with infusional 5-FU, bolus injection of mitomycin-C, and XRT (4 patients were treated off the protocol). Patients were restaged 3 wk after XRT, and those deemed resectable underwent a pancreatic resection. Three patients did not undergo exploration after the neoadjuvant therapy, although two of these were deemed resectable by CT scan. The remaining 13 patients underwent exploration and 10 underwent resection. Three did not undergo resection because of extrapancreatic disease, although their primary tumors were resectable. One patient had no residual tumor in the specimen. The others had residual tumor with evidence of necrosis and hyalinization, but all margins were free of tumor. There were two perioperative deaths from
sepsis
. Of the remaining patients who underwent resection, one died of a myocardial infarction at 9 mo. One patient died with recurrent disease at 19 mo. The remaining patients are alive 40, 32, 11, 11, 10, and 4 mo since diagnosis and are currently free of disease. Aggressive neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy can be performed safely, allows successful resection, and may yield long-term survival or curve.
...
PMID:Increased resectability of locally advanced pancreatic and periampullary carcinoma with neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy. 208 23
A phase II trial of sequential high-dose methotrexate, 1500 mg/m2, and 5-fluorouracil, 1500 mg/m2 intravenously on day 1, plus doxorubicin, 30 mg/m2 i.v. on day 14, has been undertaken in patients with locally advanced or metastatic adenocarcinoma of the pancreas. Of 25 evaluable patients there were 1 complete response and 3 partial responses for an overall response rate of 16% (95% confidence interval 5%-36%). The median survival of all patients was 6.7 months (range 1-17 months). There was one treatment-related death due to pancytopenia and
sepsis
. In all other patients therapy was generally well-tolerated. We conclude that this combination protocol has only modest activity in the treatment of advanced
pancreatic cancer
.
...
PMID:Sequential high-dose methotrexate, 5-fluorouracil, and doxorubicin for treatment of advanced pancreatic cancer. 232 55
Imipenem/cilastatin sodium (IMP/CS) was administered to patients with severe infections complicated by hematological disorders and solid tumors to assess its efficacy and safety. Primary diseases in this series of 76 cases included 37 cases of hematological disorders (acute leukemia in 25 cases, malignant lymphoma in 7 cases, aplastic anemia in 3 cases and 2 other diseases) and 38 cases of solid tumors (lung cancer in 7 cases, gastric cancer in 11 cases, esophageal cancer in 6 cases,
pancreatic cancer
in 3 cases, bile duct cancer in 4 cases, hepatocellular cancer in 3 cases, and 4 other diseases). Following results were obtained. 1. Types of infection in hematological diseases were
sepsis
in 5 cases, suspected
sepsis
in 24 cases, pneumonia in 5 cases and 3 others. The efficacy rates were 100% in
sepsis
, 62.5% in suspected
sepsis
, 80% in pneumonia and 73% in all cases. 2. Types of infection in solid tumors were
sepsis
in 2 cases, suspected
sepsis
in 13 cases, pneumonia in 10 cases, cholecystitis in 2 cases, cholangitis in 5 cases, liver abscess in 2 cases, and 4 others. The efficacy rates were 50% in
sepsis
, 69.2% in suspected
sepsis
, 80% in pneumonia, and 71.1% in all cases. 3. IPM/CS was administered in single use in 66 cases and in combination with other antibiotics in 9 cases. The efficacy rate in the single use was 72.7% and that in the combination use was 66.7%. 4. The efficacy rate in 35 cases of first use was 71.4% and that in 40 cases of second use was 72.5%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Clinical evaluation of imipenem/cilastatin sodium against severe infections complicated with hematological disorders and solid tumors]. 261 13
The aim of the present phase II clinical trial was to investigate the therapeutic efficacy and tolerance of a combination chemotherapeutic protocol consisting of 4-weekly intervals of 5-fluorouracil, doxorubicin and high-dose methotrexate (FAMeth-regimen) in patients with advanced measurable
pancreatic cancer
. After a median treatment duration of 4 (2-12) months, one complete and one partial response were achieved in the 13 evaluable patients. Two additional patients had evidence of objective tumour regression, although response was less than 50% of pretreatment tumor measurements. Stable disease was noted in 3 patients, and the tumour progressed in 6. The median survival of all evaluable patients from start of therapy is 7 (2-17) months. Side-effects associated with FAMeth-chemotherapy were generally mild and reversible and primarily included gastrointestinal symptoms (38%) and leukopenia (62%). There was 1 treatment related death due to pancytopenia and
sepsis
. Our preliminary data suggest some antitumour activity of the regimen against
pancreatic cancer
, although final assessment of therapeutic results must await accrural of additional patients.
...
PMID:[Chemotherapy of advanced pancreatic cancer with 5-fluorouracil, doxorubicin and high-dose methotrexate]. 304 29
Between 1940 and 1978, 179 patients underwent pancreatic resection (64 total, 102 Whipple, 13 distal) at the Presbyterian Hospital, predominantly for carcinoma of the pancreas and periampullary area. With respect to operative morbidity and mortality and survival, these patients have been compared with 141 patients subjected to pancreatic biopsy only, and with 172 by-passed for palliation. Likewise, total pancreatectomy has been compared to pancreaticoduodenectomy (Whipple) in terms of safety and efficacy. The overall major postoperative complication rate for pancreatic resection was 36%, in contrast with 13.5% for biopsy only and 16.8% for by-pass. Of the resected cases with major complications postoperatively, roughly half died, a mortality of 17.9%. Patients who underwent Whipple resections fared significantly better than did those having total pancreatectomies; the postoperative mortality following 102 Whipples was 14.7%, as compared with 23.4% for total pancreatectomies. Intra-abdominal
sepsis
accounted for most of the postoperative deaths; nine pancreatic and four biliary leaks or fistulae followed Whipple resections. The later complications were of interest; 18 patients undergoing biliary-en-teric by-pass procedures later developed gastroduodenal obstruction, 15 of whom required reoperation, and in 18 survivors of pancreatic resection, upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage (mostly from marginal ulcers) developed, necessitating surgery in seven. Brittle diabetes was a problem in nine patients following pancreatectomy. Survival rates were discouraging in all categories. For ductal carcinoma of the pancreas, median survival for biopsy only was two months, for by-pass six months, for total pancreatectomy nine months, and for Whipple resection 14 months. There were three five-year survivors following resection, a rate of 4.5%. Five-year survival rates following resection for ampullary, common duct, duodenal, and islet cell cancer were 27.8, 33.3, 27.3, and 37.5%, respectively. It is concluded that survival after resection for ductal
pancreatic cancer
is so rare as to be considered more a biologic aberration than a result of radical surgery. Despite theoretical advantages of total pancreatectomy over Whipple resections, our experience would suggest that the latter can be carried out with lower morbidity and mortality, and with equal chance for cure. Resection for
pancreatic cancer
should not be abandoned, but rather undertaken with greater selectivity. Operative morbidity and mortality can probably be improved additionally by preoperative transhepatic biliary decompression, and later complications reduced by including vagotomy with gastric resection at the time of pancreatectomy and by performing prophylactic gastroenterostomies in conjunction with by-pass procedures.
...
PMID:Surgical experience with pancreatic and periampullary cancer. 627 59
Eight high risk patients, median age 79 years, with a distal obstruction of the common bile duct and serious clinical symptoms of acute obstructive cholangitis were treated by EPT. In seven patients, impaction of a stone in the common bile duct was found and in one patient, an obstructing cancer. EPT was performed without immediate complications and followed by obvious drainage of purulent bile in all patients. Repapillotomy with stone extraction was necessary in three patients 5, 6, and 10 days after the first EPT. The papillotomy was followed by immediate symptom relief, normalization of body temperature, and a decrease in leukocytes and bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase values within the first several postoperative days. Average hospitalization time was 8 days, ranging from 4-17 days. The patient with
pancreatic cancer
died 3 months after the EPT. One other patient died in pseudomonas
sepsis
17 days after an uncomplicated EPT. ERCP controls in the other six patients have been normal and they all remain symptom free. Since early decompression is mandatory in these patients and laparotomy with internal decompression is associated with a high morbidity and mortality, endoscopic decompression should probably be the recommended treatment in patients with obstructive, septic cholangitis prior to employing this therapeutic option.
...
PMID:Endoscopic papillotomy (EPT) in acute obstructive suppurative cholangitis. 654 23
Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) was examined pathologically in 4906 consecutive autopsy cases during the last 11 years. The cases having pathologically confirmed DIC showing microthrombi in three or more organs were 88. Of the underlying diseases for these cases, malignant tumor was found in 40 cases and diseases of hematopoietic organs in 19. Of the cases with malignant tumor, 11 had gastric cancer, 7 had lung cancer, and 4 had
pancreatic cancer
. Thirty-three of the 40 cases with malignant tumor showed metastasis in two or more organs. Cases with pathologically confirmed or suspected DIC that had microthrombi in one or more organs were 319. As for the incidence of pathologically suggestive DIC in each disease, the incidence of malignant tumor was 7.3% and that for diseases of the hematopoietic organ was 10.6%. Infection is an important underlying condition, especially gram-negative bacillus
septicemia
which may play an important role in the development of DIC. An increase in the number of white blood cells appears to be one of the causative conditions of DIC. Kidney is involved most frequently by the deposition of microthrombi, and 27 out of 88 cases show ischemic lesions induced by intravascular coagulation. There were 109 cases having clinically diagnosed or suspected DIC, but 67 cases showed no microthrombus formation. On the other hand, 63 among 4,797 cases with clinically unsuspected DIC revealed microthrombus formation in three or more organs by the postmortem examination.
...
PMID:Incidence and clinicopathological significance of DIC in autopsy cases. 666 56
We described three
septicemia
cases in which blood cultures yielded gram-positive cocci identified as Leuconostoc spp. and Pediococcus spp. Patients were three male adults aged 63 to 71 years with severe underlying diseases,
pancreatic cancer
, esophageal cancer and diabetes mellitus with chronic renal failure. They had fever and chills at the onsets of
septicemia
with acute obstructive suppurative cholangitis, acute pneumonia, and infection complicated with invasion sites of esophageal cancer contagious to bronchus and subcutaneous tissue. Blood cultures yielded catalase and oxidase negative highly vancomycin-resistant (MIC: 1024 micrograms/ml <) gram-positive cocci showing alpha or gamma hemolysis on blood agar plates. Two cases were polymicrobial infections. In one case with esophageal cancer, clinical symptoms persisted after the start of antimicrobial chemotherapy and the patient died 10 days later associated with complications of esophageal cancer. Leuconostoc lactis, Leuconostoc mesenteroides subsp. dextranicum, and Pediococcus acidilactici wee identified by physiological reactions. These strains were also highly resistant to teicoplanin and fosfomycin, and tolerant to all rested beta-lactams such as benzylpenicillin. This is the first report in Japan to our knowledge on the identification of Leuconostoc spp. and Pediococcus spp. isolated from human infectious diseases.
...
PMID:[Microbiological and clinical studies of vancomycin resistant Leuconostoc spp. and Pediococcus spp. isolated from septicemia patients]. 796 99
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