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

Massive hemorrhage from diverticular disease of the colon is a very difficult problem in abdominal emergency surgery. The pathogenesis of bleeding colonic diverticulosis is strictly correlated to the angioarchitecture of the colonic diverticular wall. Here the vasa recta penetrate the colonic wall from the serosa to the submucosa through connective tissue septa. Injurious factors arising from the colonic or diverticular lumen can produce an eccentric damage to the luminal side with intimal thickening, segmental weakening of the artery and its rupture with massive bleeding. Conventional barium enema is not able to show the source of the hemorrhage in the majority of the bleeding patients; colonoscopy, as primary emergency procedure, has significant positive findings in 41.5%-83.7% of patients. Radionuclide bleeding scans have a sensitivity rate of 86%-94%. Emergency arteriography localizes the bleeding source in higher rates ranging from 58% to 86% and is successful after intraarterial infusion of vasopressin or embolization in 47%-92% of patients. Surgical treatment for continued bleeding from diverticular disease is controversy. Segmental resection should be performed on patients with localized bleeding sources (positive arteriogram). Laparotomy, anterograde irrigation and intraoperative colonoscopy are indicated in patients with multiple bleeding sites and negative arteriography. Because the right colon is the most common site of bleeding in same cases is necessary to perform a subtotal colectomy with ileorectal anastomosis. Blind resections particularly in the elderly patients present high rebleeding rate (> 60%) and high mortality (30%) with sepsis accounting for the majority of deaths.
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PMID:[Massive hemorrhage caused by colonic diverticulosis]. 797 52

Bacillus cereus is a gram-positive aerobic or facultatively anaerobic spore-forming rod. It is a cause of food poisoning, which is frequently associated with the consumption of rice-based dishes. The organism produces an emetic or diarrheal syndrome induced by an emetic toxin and enterotoxin, respectively. Other toxins are produced during growth, including phospholipases, proteases, and hemolysins, one of which, cereolysin, is a thiol-activated hemolysin. These toxins may contribute to the pathogenicity of B. cereus in nongastrointestinal disease. B. cereus isolated from clinical material other than feces or vomitus was commonly dismissed as a contaminant, but increasingly it is being recognized as a species with pathogenic potential. It is now recognized as an infrequent cause of serious nongastrointestinal infection, particularly in drug addicts, the immunosuppressed, neonates, and postsurgical patients, especially when prosthetic implants such as ventricular shunts are inserted. Ocular infections are the commonest types of severe infection, including endophthalmitis, panophthalmitis, and keratitis, usually with the characteristic formation of corneal ring abscesses. Even with prompt surgical and antimicrobial agent treatment, enucleation of the eye and blindness are common sequelae. Septicemia, meningitis, endocarditis, osteomyelitis, and surgical and traumatic wound infections are other manifestations of severe disease. B. cereus produces beta-lactamases, unlike Bacillus anthracis, and so is resistant to beta-lactam antibiotics; it is usually susceptible to treatment with clindamycin, vancomycin, gentamicin, chloramphenicol, and erythromycin. Simultaneous therapy via multiple routes may be required.
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PMID:Bacillus cereus and related species. 826 90

Three men and one woman (mean age 52 years) were admitted to hospital for septicemia (2 cases), sudden partial loss of visual acuity (1 case) and suspected conjunctivitis (1 case). Three of the patients showed risk factors (diabetes, alcohol intoxication, immunosuppression). Panophthalmitis (affecting all tunics of the eye) was apparent from the initial examination in all 4 cases (2 bilateral and 2 unilateral). Ocular involvement was associated with endocarditis and meningitis (pneumococcus) in 1 case, with nocardiosis (pulmonary, cerebral and nodal) in 1 case, and with septicemia with bacterial arthritis (Escherichia coli, streptococcus A) in 2 cases. Hemocultures were positive in 3/4 cases. The micro-organism was also detected in the joint (n = 2), urine (n = 1) and cerebrospinal fluid (n = 1), during pulmonary transparietal puncture (n = 1) and in intraocular biopsy tissue (n = 1). All patients received appropriate antibiotic therapy intravenously and intraocularly. The infection was cured in all cases, but with severe functional sequelae: blindness in 2 cases, and unilateral enucleation in the other 2 cases.
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PMID:[Hematogenic bacterial endophthalmitis. A rare infection with very poor functional prognosis]. 879 96

This paper focuses on Buruli-ulcer disease, the third most common mycobacterial disease among immunocompetent people. Buruli-ulcer disease is caused by an infection with Mycobacterium ulcerans, which belongs to the large group of environmental mycobacteria. It is endemic in many countries, usually in areas of tropical rain forest. Transmission of infection is through abraded skin or mild traumatic injuries after contact with contaminated water, soil, or vegetation. This disease mostly affects children which manifest from painless nodules to large, undermined ulcerative lesions that heals spontaneously but slowly. Buruli-ulcer disease is accompanied by few systemic symptoms, but occasionally secondary infections resulting in sepsis or tetanus cause severe systemic disease and death. However, extensive scarring can lead to contractures of the limbs, blindness, and other adverse complications. Management of the disease is still primarily surgical, and includes excision, skin grafting, or both. Although Bacillus Calmette-Guerin vaccine has mild but a significant protective effect, vaccine developments directed at the toxin produced by M. ulcerans are needed.
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PMID:Mycobacterium ulcerans infection. 1060 56

Metastatic meningococcal endophthalmitis, although rare, is a rapidly progressive and sight-threatening infection. We present a 10-month-old infant with meningococcal meningitis who developed unilateral metastatic endophthalmitis. If patients develop a sepsis-like picture with cloudy cornea and purulent conjunctivitis, we have to consider the possibility of endophthalmitis and full ophthalmological evaluations are indicated. Treatment should be started as early as possible. The outcome of endophthalmitis is frequently permanent visual impairment. Endophthalmitis is a true medical emergency requiring early antibiotic therapy with full dose of antimicrobials to avoid morbidity and blindness.
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PMID:Endophthalmitis as a complication of meningococcal meningitis: report of one case. 1091 May 99

The treatment and cure of patients exposed to sulfur mustard is a remaining challenge despite on-going research in this field. A severe suppression of the immune system still remains the major cause of opportunistic infections, septicemia and death in patients injured by sulfur mustard. In this report, we present a model of sulfur mustard contamination in mice, which exhibit clinical signs similar to that exhibited by patients during the Iran-Iraq war. Dose response studies were performed to determine the most appropriate dose for our model i.e., 6.35 micrograms/kg. Animals contaminated with sulfur mustard intraperitoneally showed symptoms of anorexia, diarrhea, loss of weight and blindness. Autopsy of animals showed a severe necrosis in gut and degeneration of spleen. Results shows that sulfur mustard caused an over all suppression of the immune response to sRBC as indicated by agglutination titer and DTH tests. These studies present a rodent model of sulfur mustard exposure, which can be used for further studies in this area.
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PMID:Modeling for immunosuppression by sulfur mustard. 1136 43

The Lady Dufferin Fund, founded in 1885 in India, had by 1940 established 400 hospitals to alleviate diseases and mortality related to childbirth. After independence 2328 community health centers and 21254 primary health centers were created in the country. During 1974-94 more than 131,000 subcenters were set up and about 620,000 auxiliary nurse midwives (ANMs) had been trained. The Ministry of Health introduced four health prevention schemes in 1969: 1) immunization of children against diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus; 2) immunization of pregnant women against tetanus; 3) prophylaxis of mothers and children against nutritional anemia; and 4) prophylaxis of children against blindness caused by vitamin A deficiency. As a result, infant mortality declined from 146/1000 live births to 74/1000 in 1993; but maternal mortality still stayed around 4-5/1000. In 1993 an estimated 117,356 maternal deaths occurred out of a total of 26,057,000 births, equalling 4.5 deaths per 1000 live births. The main causes of maternal deaths are hemorrhage, anemia, abortion, toxemia, and puerperal sepsis. Only about 411 first referral units in community health centers are functioning properly. Prenatal care of mothers includes the administration of tetanus toxoid and iron-folic acid tablets. However, the prenatal coverage reached only about 50% of mothers; and the coverage was only 21.4% in Bihar, 23.8% in Nagaland, 29.3% in Rajasthan, and 29.6% in Uttar Pradesh. In these areas administrative inefficiency is widespread with nonavailability of essential drugs for malaria, infections, sepsis, dysentery, and colds. During 1992-93 the rate of hospital deliveries ranged from 6.1% in Nagaland to 88.4% in Kerala, with a national average of only 25.6%. 71% of deliveries in rural areas and 30% in urban areas were conducted by untrained assistants. Although there are 450 ANM training schools in the country, the level of training has deteriorated. The major causes of infant deaths are respiratory infections and diarrhea, responsible for 13.5% and 6.9% of mortality, respectively. Severe malnutrition and inadequate vaccination are other major causes of child deaths and morbidity.
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PMID:Maternal and child health in India: a critical review. 1229 Sep 61

Orbital cellulitis and abscess formation are rare complications of sinusitis, however acute orbital inflammation is secondary to sinusitis in about 70% of cases. Delay in diagnosis must not occur to avoid serious complications such as blindness and life threatening intracranial sepsis. A case is reported in which despite late referral, emergency surgical intervention was sight saving.
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PMID:Periorbital swelling: the important distinction between allergy and infection. 1498 62

Isolated intracranial hypertension is a common manifestation of intracranial sino-venous thrombosis (ISVT). Markedly elevated intracranial tension presents with unusual features including cranial neuropathies and radiculopathy. We report two cases with ISVT, which presented with headache, papilledema, progressive visual loss, complete ophthalmoplegia and flaccid areflexic quadriparesis along with a normal sensorium. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain and cervical spinal cord showed no lesions that could account for the neurological deficits. Markedly elevated lumbar CSF pressure was noted in both cases. Nerve conduction study favored radiculopathy in one case and was normal in the other. Raised intracranial pressure was found to be the sole cause for the clinical manifestations. Visual impairment persisted in one patient despite lumbo-peritoneal shunting while the other died of septicemia. To our knowledge there are no previous reports of a syndrome comprising blindness, ophthalmoplegia and flaccid quadriplegia due to intracranial hypertension in ISVT.
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PMID:Blindness, ophthalmoplegia and extensive radiculopathy: an unusual clinical syndrome in intracranial sino-venous thrombosis. 1506 50

There is little literature to guide therapy in children and young adults with intracranial germ cell tumors. We present 17 consecutively diagnosed intracranial germ cell tumors at The Children's Hospital, Denver, from 1995 to 2001. Of 17 patients, 3 had considerable delay in diagnosis. Two with suprasellar tumors presented with dementia, blindness and pan-hypopituitarism and another with recurrent subarachnoid hemorrhage. Seven had germinoma, three were metastatic at diagnosis. Ten had non-germinomatous germ cell tumors (NGGCT), 5/10 were alpha feto-protein (AFP) positive only, one beta-human chorionic growth (betaHCG) factor positive only, 3 positive for AFP and betaHCG, and 1 malignant teratoma. Therapy for metastatic patients consisted of chemotherapy followed by craniospinal radiation (CSI). Patients with localized disease received chemotherapy followed by focal radiation. Two patients received chemotherapy only, one because she died of sepsis while receiving chemotherapy and one because of neurologic injury incurred during surgery parents elected for no therapy. Three patients have died, one of tumor recurrence, one from a remote complication of surgery and one of sepsis. Twelve patients are alive without evidence of disease from 10 to 68 months (median 31.5 months). All five children with only AFP positivity, treated with chemotherapy and focal radiation are alive without evidence of disease at 10, 16, 22, 41 and 41 months. Thus, there is little evidence that CSI is necessary in non-metastatic germinomas and AFP positive NGGCTs when combined chemotherapy and radiation therapy is used. However, complications of delayed diagnosis, surgery and chemotherapy are important causes of mortality, with only one patient dying of tumor.
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PMID:Intracranial germ cell tumors: a single institution experience and review of the literature. 1521 52


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