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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Intradermal injections of killed Escherichia coli are known to cause a variety of pathophysiological changes in the microcirculation that facilitate the extravasation of plasma constituents into the interstitium. In an attempt to learn more of the factors that regulate the magnitude and duration of inflammatory edema, we have focused on the relationship between the extravasation of protein into the interstitium and the removal of extravascular protein from the lesion sites. Vascular permeability changes have been assessed by the local accumulation of systemically administered [131I] or [125I]-albumin and extravascular protein clearance measured by monitoring the disappearance of [125I]-albumin from the same sites. Radioactivity was quantitated with an external gamma-scintillation probe or by punching out the lesion sites in sacrificed animals and counting in a gamma-spectrometer. Scintillation probe measurements of the net accumulation of intravenously administered [125I]-albumin in E. coli-induced skin lesions revealed that the extravasation of albumin was greater than the clearance of protein from the same sites. Comparisons of the removal rates of albumin injected directly into the E. coli sites revealed that, despite increases in vascular permeability amounting to 170 to 700% of control values, the mobilization of deposited albumin was no greater than that from control tissues that received saline; in fact with high concentrations of E. coli (10(8) injected/site) the mobilization of protein from the lesions was significantly reduced. The systemic administration of 055:B5 endotoxin (0.3, 1.6, or 3.3 micrograms/kg) also suppressed the clearance of albumin from skin. In contrast to these results, 300 to 1500% increases in vascular permeability induced with other inflammatory stimuli including thermal injury, high concentrations of bovine
serum albumin
, or bradykinin, resulted in enhanced clearance of extravascular protein from lesion or injection sites. These experiments suggest that an inability to effectively mobilize extravascular protein from the inflammatory focus could be a major contributing factor in regulating edema in inflammatory reactions induced with E. coli and may possibly contribute to the edema associated with
septicemia
.
...
PMID:Relationship between increased vascular permeability and extravascular albumin clearance in rabbit inflammatory responses induced with Escherichia coli. 353 49
The prognostic value of conventional renal and liver function tests was evaluated during surgical
septicemia
. Changes in renal function variables were associated with the development of septic shock. Creatinine clearance was the most sensitive variable in predicting the outcome of septic shock, but serum creatinine and urine output were also of some value in this respect. Significantly lower creatinine clearance and urine output values, as well as significantly higher serum creatinine concentrations, were thus observed during septic shock with fatal outcome compared to non-fatal septic shock. In
septicemia
not complicated with shock, the variables of renal function remained in the normal range irrespective of final outcome. Among the liver function tests,
serum albumin
and total protein concentration revealed significant differences in behaviour between survivors and patients dying with persistent
septicemia
. However, due to the small differences and considerable overlap observed between the two groups of patients during the first 2 weeks of
septicemia
, these two variables are of limited practical value as prognostic predictors. The other liver function tests gave no information as regards the outcome of
septicemia
in the present study.
...
PMID:Renal and liver function tests in surgical septicemia. 357 43
1. Plasma fibronectin, a glycoprotein, is an opsonin of the reticuloendothelial system. 2. In ten healthy volunteers starved for 4.5 d, daily measurements showed a rapid reduction in plasma fibronectin, no alteration in either C3 or plasma transferrin and, at the end of the starvation period, an elevated
serum albumin
. 3. On refeeding, plasma fibronectin rapidly returned to its prestarvation level but plasma transferrin was significantly reduced and did not recover by the end of the study. 4. Changes in plasma fibronectin may be a sensitive index of nutritional status. The reduction of plasma fibronectin in short-term starvation may compromise host defence tolerance of injury and
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Changes in plasma fibronectin during acute nutritional deprivation in healthy human subjects. 366 79
The authors evaluated the host-defence capability of a 33-year-old woman with a history of poor wound healing, gastrointestinal fistulas and bacterial and fungal
sepsis
after abdominal operations. The following tests gave normal results: hemoglobin, blood neutrophil and monocyte counts, delayed hypersensitivity skin test,
serum albumin
, immunoglobulin and complement levels, blood T- and B-cell percentages, in-vitro immunoglobulin synthesis and body cell mass. The following tests gave abnormal results: lymphocyte count, leukocyte adherence, in-vivo and in-vitro polymorphonuclear neutrophil chemotaxis, neutrophil bacterial killing and antibody response to tetanus toxoid. Decreased polymorphonuclear neutrophil and humoral immune functions could account for the woman's history of repeated surgical
sepsis
. Evaluation of host-defence mechanisms can illuminate the cause of repeated episodes of
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Host-defence mechanisms in surgical patients: case report of reduced polymorphonuclear neutrophil and antibody functions associated with surgical sepsis. 370 59
Ten parameters, including delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity testing (DCH), were evaluated with regard to their predictive value in instances of postoperative septic complications. In 302 patients undergoing surgical treatment, 45 complications, including wound infection, abscess, pneumonia and
sepsis
, were seen postoperatively in 42 patients. When these patients were compared with 260 patients without complications, hemoglobin, leukocyte count,
serum albumin
, total protein, blood sedimentation rate, age and sex were found not to contribute to the prediction of postoperative complications. In DCH testing, the complication rate increased from 7.5 per cent in normergic patients to 20.6 per cent in anergic patients. With increasing length and severity of operation, the complication rate increased from 6.5 to 26.4 per cent and from 6.5 to 31.8 per cent, respectively. Only in severe, long lasting operations could DCH testing differentiate the complication risk. Normergic patients had a 8.6 per cent complication rate; hypoergic patients, 36.6 per cent, and anergic patients, 37.5 per cent. The results of DCH testing did not correlate with the complication rate in any of the other operative groups. In conclusion, the predictive value of DCH testing is clearly greater in groups of patients highly affected by the operative trauma. The results of this study show that it is important to consider both host defense mechanisms and environmental factors in the assessment of operative risks.
...
PMID:The predictive role of delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity testing in postoperative complications. 371 89
Thirty-five patients with serious infections and impaired renal function were treated empirically with 2 to 8 g of cefoperazone per day. Infections included
sepsis
in 14, nonbacteremic urinary infections in nine, pneumonia in five, intra-abdominal infection in five, fasciitis in one, and malignant otitis externa in one. The average age of this group was 64.3 years, 25 had ultimately fatal underlying diseases, and their average serum creatinine level was 5.2 mg/dl. Infections were caused by Enterobacteriaceae in 23 patients, Streptococcus faecalis in five, Pseudomonas aeruginosa in four, Staphylococcus aureus in four, Hemophilus influenzae in three, and Staphylococcus epidermidis, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Clostridium sordelli in one each. Overall, 32 patients had clinical and microbiologic cures, two had improvement, and one had failure. Hypoprothrombinemia occurred in 18 of 28 patients not given vitamin K for prophylaxis and occurred more often in those with
serum albumin
concentrations below 3.5 g/dl. Prothrombin times returned to normal within 36 hours of treatment with vitamin K, although two patients experienced mild hematemesis. In anicteric patients with liver function abnormalities, 2 g every 12 hours produced peak and trough serum concentrations that averaged 254 and 125 micrograms/ml, respectively, compared with 179.5 and 19.5 micrograms/ml, respectively, in five with normal liver function test results. In jaundiced patients treated with 1 g every 12 hours, trough concentrations were comparably elevated. Serum concentrations did not correlate with hypoprothrombinemia, but high levels throughout the dosing interval may have contributed to the excellent cure rate in this study.
...
PMID:Cefoperazone for empiric therapy in patients with impaired renal function. 374 81
To study the etiology of chronic childhood diarrhea among Nigerian children, 142 patients, aged 6 months to 5 years, with diarrhea for at least 1 month, were evaluated; the study took place during January-December 1983 at the Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital, Zaria, Northern Nigeria. Enteropathogenic agents were identified in stools of 90 (63%) patients. Giardia lamblia and Entamoeba histolytica were most commonly detected, representing 41% and 23%, respectively, of all parasitic pathogens. In children with negative stool microscopy, chronic diarrhea was associated with primary lactose intolerance (2 cases), abdominal tuberculosis (2 cases), hyponatremia, low
serum albumin
, anemia due to sickle cell disease, or Staphylococcus aureus infection. In contrast with chronic diarrhea etiologies reported among children in Europe and North America, infections were the major cause of chronic childhood diarrhea among these children. In general, it is accepted that intestinal infection usually produces acute diarrhea--and that, if the host fails to mount a competent immune response, if there is repeated exposure to infectious agents, or if severe infection damages a substantial proportion of absorptive cells, then severe, protracted diarrhea may result. The high case fatality rate of 9% in this series was associated with specific infectious complications of
septicemia
, bronchopneumonia, lobar pneumonia and measles. Severe malnutrition also worsened the prognosis in chronic diarrhea. The results indicate that early detection and treatment of amebiasis and giardiasis is a useful approach in the treatment of chronic diarrhea cases among children.
...
PMID:Chronic diarrhoea in Nigerian children. 383 11
Operations on the biliary tract in cirrhotic patients are reported to have a higher than normal risk of operative morbidity and mortality. We reviewed 39 cases from two university-based hospitals over a five-year period. Each patient had biliary tract surgery and biopsy-proven cirrhosis. Eight patients died (21%), and major complications were found in 12 surviving patients (35%). Local and systemic
sepsis
was the major contributor, accounting for all of the deaths and 17 of the 22 (77%) complications among survivors. Choledochotomy was done in ten patients; three of them died (30%) and nine major complications occurred in the remaining five. Preoperative risk factors found to be predictive of this high morbidity and mortality were ascites (50% mortality, 50% morbidity), prolonged prothrombin time (29% mortality, 38% morbidity), and a
serum albumin
level of less than 3.5 mg/dl (33% mortality, 40% morbidity). The presence of other major systemic disease was not significantly different between survivors and nonsurvivors. In 12 patients with no ascites and normal preoperative serum chemistry values, no deaths and only one minor complication occurred. We conclude that although biliary surgery in cirrhotic patients carries a high mortality, this risk can be assessed preoperatively. There appears to be a small subgroup of patients with cirrhosis and cholelithiasis who can have a favorable outcome. Operative therapy in these patients should be reserved for the complications of the biliary tract.
...
PMID:Liver cirrhosis and biliary surgery: assessment of risk. 391 47
A study was undertaken to identify the nutritional parameters associated with a high risk of postoperative
sepsis
. The nutritional status of 162 cancer patients subjected to clean or clean-contaminated elective surgery was preoperatively evaluated according to the following parameters: percentage weight loss, arm circumference, triceps skinfold, arm muscle circumference, creatinine-height index, total serum protein,
serum albumin
, total iron-binding capacity, cholinesterase, peripheral lymphocytes, complement C3-C4 components, and skin tests. Patients were followed postoperatively according to a precise protocol to classify them as infected or noninfected. Postoperative
sepsis
was present in 40 patients who had significantly different mean values for four nutritional parameters from those of 114 patients with no complications, ie, total serum protein, 6.60 vs 6.99 g/dl, p = 0.008;
serum albumin
, 3.39 vs 3.66 g/dl, p = 0.001; total iron-binding capacity 301.32 vs 337.17 mmg/dl, p = 0.006; and cholinesterase, 2389.77 vs 2770.10 mU/ml, p = 0.005. Moreover, the relative risk and the attributable risk for these variables were evaluated and the significance was tested by the chi 2 test. By using multiple logistic analysis it appeared that only total serum protein and total iron-binding capacity gave an independent contribution to the risk of postoperative
sepsis
, while
serum albumin
disappeared and cholinesterase became non significant when the contribution of the first two variables was accounted for. It was also possible to identify, in a small number of patients, combinations of two variables that were associated with a very high risk of postoperative
sepsis
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:"Nutritional" markers as prognostic indicators of postoperative sepsis in cancer patients. 392 22
The conventional animal model of human portal systemic encephalopathy is the dog with Eck fistula. Dogs fed standard dog chow after Eck fistula manifest anorexia, weight loss, hepatic atrophy and encephalopathy. This study was done to determine the natural history of dogs undergoing Eck fistulas when adequate nutrition is maintained with a palatable diet. Twenty-four mongrel dogs were divided into four groups--Eck fistula fed standard dry dog chow (EF-SC) (n equals nine); sham operated fed standard chow (SO-SC) (n equals five); Eck fistula fed a liquid (Isocal) diet (EF-LD), LD), and sham operated fed a liquid diet (SO-LD) (n equals five). Dogs were sacrificed when they had clinical signs of encephalopathy or up to 120 days after operation. EF-SC dogs had a daily caloric intake approximately 40 per cent of that of the other groups. Two EF-SC dogs died of
sepsis
within two weeks of the operation, the other seven became encephalopathic between 46 and 91 days (a mean of 63.6 +/- 15.6). No other dogs had signs of neurologic deterioration. EF-SC dogs lost 19 +/- 9 per cent body weight and the
serum albumin
level decreased 14.5 per cent while the other groups maintained body weight and
serum albumin
levels. Both EF-SC and EF-LD groups had decreased liver weight to body weight ratios (LW X 100/BW) compared with sham operated upon dogs reflecting hepatic atrophy (1.97 +/- 0.7 and 2.2 +/- 0.23 versus 3.04 +/- 0.85 and 3.48 +/- 0.44). Results of histologic examination of the liver revealed hepatocyte atrophy, deglycogenation and lipid accumulation in EF dogs. We conclude from these data that providing dogs with Eck fistula a palatable diet prevents weight loss and malnutrition, but not hepatic atrophy. The lack of neurologic signs in well nourished dogs suggests to us that data concerning hepatic coma from the standard Eck fistula model should be interpreted with extreme caution.
...
PMID:Adequate diet prevents hepatic coma in dogs with Eck fistulas. 394 90
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