Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) is a rare but potentially fatal clinical syndrome associated with transfusion. Dyspnea, hypoxemia, hypotension, and fever are the typical symptoms which mimic those of the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). The onset of TRALI is usually within 4-6 hours after transfusion. According to literature, TRALI is possibly underdiagnosed and underreported. Differential diagnosis includes
fluid overload
, allergy and
sepsis
. No definite protocol except supportive treatment is recommended up to now. We present two cases of TRALI and discuss the possible mechanisms and the role of steroid therapy.
...
PMID:Transfusion-related acute lung injury--a report of two and the possible role of steroid. 1555 94
Desire to restore the balance of body elements has enamored physicians since the ancient practice of bloodletting. More recently, extracorporeal techniques have been employed in both adults and children in treating
sepsis
. Extracorporeal therapies include continuous renal replacement (CRRT), plasma-based removal techniques, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). These treatments could theoretically 1) provide immunohomeostasis of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines and other
sepsis
mediators, 2) decrease organ microthrombosis through removal of pro-coagulant factors and modulating the impaired septic coagulation response in
sepsis
, and 3) provide mechanical support of organ perfusion during the acute septic episode to allow time for response to traditional
sepsis
therapies and antimicrobials. CRRT is beneficial in managing
fluid overload
and acute renal failure in
sepsis
. Removal of
sepsis
mediators through the technique is variable, and the outcome impact of CRRT on
sepsis
has not been definitively determined. High-flow CRRT has demonstrated benefit in septic adults. Intriguing early results suggest that plasma exchange could improve outcomes in both adults and children. Based on experience, ECMO is recommended for refractory septic shock in neonates and should be considered for use in children. Ongoing trials may help determine whether the promise of extracorporeal therapies translates into outcome improvement in septic children.
...
PMID:Extracorporeal therapies in the treatment of sepsis: experience and promise. 1682 69
End-stage renal disease (ESRD), due to its high morbidity and mortality as well as social and financial implications, is a major public health problem. Outcome depends not only on different modalities of treatment like hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis, but also on existing co-morbidities, age, duration on dialysis, supportive therapies and infection control strategies. Thus, a detailed study becomes necessary to improve health care delivery, provide medical care and to establish a geographical reference. The present study was undertaken to characterize the ESRD patients by their demographic and co-morbid conditions and relate this to the morbidity and mortality trends. The medical records of 110 ESRD patients seen over a five-year period (June 1995 to December 1999) in two tertiary-care hospitals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia were studied retrospectively. There were 79 (64.5%) males and 31 (35.5%) females; their age ranged from 17 to 92 years (mean age 53.8 +/- 17.8 years). Diabetes was the commonest cause of ESRD seen in 26 (26.6%) followed by nephrosclerosis, unknown etiology, lupus nephritis, pyelonephritis and primary glomerulonephritis. Diabetes mellitus was the most prevalent co-morbidity seen during the study period and occurred in 65 patients (59%) followed by heart disease in 36 (32.7%), liver disease in 30 (27.3%), cerebrovascular accidents in 13 (11.8%) and neoplasm in 11 (10%). Seven (6.3%) patients only were smokers. Hemodialysis was the most frequent treatment choice as renal replacement therapy. Among the causes of hospitalization, cardiovascular conditions were the leading single cause (19.1%), followed by access related reasons and infections (11.5% each). The overall hospitalization rate was 11.2 days/year. The overall mortality rate was 8.07 deaths/year. The leading cause of death was cardiovascular in 15 (51.7%) followed by unknown/sudden death in eight (27.5%). Other causes of death included
fluid overload
, gastrointestinal hemorrhage,
septicemia
, liver disease and pulmonary embolism. Diabetes was the commonest co-morbid cause among the deceased. Old age, diabetes mellitus, prolonged duration on dialysis and cardiac diseases were the common causes of mortality. Our findings are consistent with worldwide reports. The study provides a reference data and will hopefully be helpful in improving the medical care.
...
PMID:Morbidity and mortality in ESRD patients on dialysis. 1766 Jun 70
Reports of dialysis-associated hyperglycemia (DH) were compared to reports of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) and nonketotic hyperglycemia (NKH) in patients with preserved renal function. Average serum values in DH (491 observations), DKA (1036 observations), and NKH (403 observations) were as follows, respectively: glucose, 772, 649, and 961 mg/dl; sodium, 127, 134, and 149, mmol/l; and tonicity, 298, 304, and 355 mOsm/kg. Assuming that euglycemic (serum glucose, 90 mg/dl) values were the same (sodium, 140 mmol/l; tonicity, 285 mOsm/kg) for all three states, the hyperglycemic rise in the average serum tonicity value per 100-mg/dl rise in serum glucose concentration was 1.9 mOsm/kg in DH, 3.5 mOsm/kg in DKA, and 8.1 mOsm/kg in NKH. Neurological manifestations in DH patients were caused by coexisting conditions (ketoacidosis,
sepsis
, and neurological disease) in most instances, and by severe hypertonicity (>320 mOsm/kg), with clearing after insulin administration, in a few instances. In 148 episodes of DH corrected with insulin only, the mean increase in serum sodium per 100-mg/dl decrease in serum glucose (Delta[Na]/Delta[Glu]) was -1.61 mmol/l. In agreement with theoretical predictions, Delta[Na]/Delta[Glu] was numerically smaller in patients with edema than in those with euvolemia. The average hyperglycemic increase in extracellular volume, calculated from changes in serum sodium concentration during correction of DH using insulin alone, was 0.013 l/l per 100-mg/dl increase in serum glucose concentration. A small number of DH patients presented with pulmonary edema rectified by insulin alone. DH causes modest hypertonicity, with few patients having neurological manifestations caused usually by other coexisting conditions. In contrast to DKA or NKH, which usually presents with hypovolemia, DH causes
hypervolemia
manifested occasionally by pulmonary edema. Insulin is adequate treatment for DH.
...
PMID:Body fluid abnormalities in severe hyperglycemia in patients on chronic dialysis: review of published reports. 1819 Oct 75
Management of fluid balance is one of the basic but vital tasks in the care of critically ill patients. Hypovolemia results in a decrease in cardiac output and tissue perfusion and may lead to progressive multiple organ dysfunction, including the development of acute renal injury (AKI). However, in an effort to reverse pre-renal oliguria, it is not uncommon for patients with established oliguric acute renal failure, particularly when associated with
sepsis
, to receive excessive fluid resuscitation, leading to
fluid overload
. In patients with established oliguria, renal replacement therapy may be required to treat
hypervolemia
. Safe prescription of fluid loss during RRT requires intimate knowledge of the patient's underlying condition, understanding of the process of ultrafiltration and close monitoring of the patient's cardiovascular response to fluid removal. To preserve tissue perfusion in patients with AKI, it is important that RRT be prescribed in a way that optimizes fluid balance by removing fluid without compromising the effective circulating fluid volume. In patients who are clinically fluid overloaded, it is equally important that the amount of fluid removed be as exact as possible. Fluid balance errors can occur as a result of inappropriate prescription, operator error or machine error. Some CRRT machines have potential for significant fluid errors if alarms can be overridden. Threshold values for fluid balance error have been developed which can be used to predict the severity of harm. It is important that RRT education programs emphasize the risk associated with fluid balance errors and with overriding machine alarms.
...
PMID:Volume management by renal replacement therapy in acute kidney injury. 1831 30
Coagulopathy is an important cause of mortality in critically ill children. Traditional therapies to correct coagulopathy lead to great time delays and cause
fluid overload
in patients. The authors report the effectiveness and safety of the activated recombinant factor VII (rFVIIa) administration in a series of 13 nonhemophiliac children with acute, life-threatening bleeding. In this retrospective study, the records of the patients who were not diagnosed with congenital hemorrhagic disorder and were administered rFVIIa due to any other reason in Ege University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, between February 2002 and February 2007 were reviewed retrospectively. Thirteen nonhemophiliac patients with acute life-threatening bleeding and ages ranging from 2 days to 15 years received rFVIIa over a 5-year period. Three patients were diagnosed with hemaphagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, 4 with prematurity,
sepsis
, and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), 5 with
sepsis
, multiple organ dysfunction syndrome, and DIC, and 1 with acute liver failure. Severe bleeding resulted from pulmonary (n = 3), lower gastrointestinal system (n = 2), esophagus varices (n = 1), pulmonary and gastrointestinal system (n = 4), pulmonary, gastrointestinal system, and intracranial hemorrhage (n = 1), and gastrointestinal system and intracranial hemorrhage (n = 2). Median frequency of rFVIIa administration was 3 per patient (range 2-15) and median dose of rFVIIa was 90 microg/kg, ranging from 60 to 135 microg/kg each administration. All of the patients were given fresh frozen plasma and if necessary platelet transfusion (n = 10) or fibrinogen concentrate (n = 3) before administration of rFVIIa. In 6 patients, lack of success to control bleeding by conventional methods was the only cause to start rFVIIa. In 7 patients, the need for volume restriction was also a significant contributing factor in deciding to start rFVIIa. Median PT was 32.9 s (range: 19-65) before rFVIIa administration and it was decreased to 11.6 s (range: 10.7-12.8), 2-3 h after rFVIIa infusion. Bleeding was stopped completely in 10 patients at least for 24 h and decreased in 3 patients 30-45 min after rFVIIa administration. Two patients had thrombotic complications attributed to rFVIIa administration. No other complication was observed in the other patients. In this retrospective study, rFVIIa was found to be effective at controlling severe hemorrhagic symptoms of different etiologies in children without congenital hemorrhagic disorder. In addition to the rapid control of bleeding, administration of this agent improved fluid balance and led to a reduction in blood product requirements in critically ill children. However, survival was still poor (23%), and 2/13 (15.4%) patients developed venous and arterial thrombosis within 3 h of treatment. The authors emphasize that in acquired, acute life-threatening bleeding, simultaneous administration of rFVIIa with conventional treatment may contribute to patient survival. However, the risk of thromboembolism should be considered before this treatment is given.
...
PMID:Single-center experience: use of recombinant factor VIIa for acute life-threatening bleeding in children without congenital hemorrhagic disorder. 1848 74
Fluid therapy is fundamental to the acute resuscitation of critically ill patients. In general, however, early and appropriate goal-directed fluid therapy contributes to a degree of
fluid overload
in most if not all patients. Recent data imply that a threshold may exist beyond which, after acute resuscitation, additional fluid therapy may cause harm. In patients with acute kidney injury and/or oliguria, a positive fluid balance is almost universal. Few studies have examined the impact of fluid balance on clinical outcomes in critically ill adults with acute kidney injury. Payen and coworkers, in a secondary analysis of the SOAP (
Sepsis
Occurrence in Acutely Ill Patients) study, now present evidence that there is an independent association between mortality and positive fluid balance in a cohort of critically ill patients with acute kidney injury. In this commentary, we discuss these findings within the context of prior literature and propose that assessment of fluid balance should be considered as a potentially valuable biomarker of critical illness.
...
PMID:Fluid balance as a biomarker: impact of fluid overload on outcome in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury. 1853 29
The development of recent standardized definitions of acute kidney injury (AKI) has allowed us to begin understanding pediatric AKI epidemiology and risk factors and to stratify outcome by AKI severity. AKI incidence will vary with illness severity of the population studied and definition type, ranging from less than 1% when need for dialysis is used to 82% when less conservative definitions (such as > or =1.5 times baseline serum creatinine) are used to define AKI. The most common AKI causes are secondary, such as
sepsis
, nephrotoxic medication, and ischemia, each leading to acute tubular necrosis (ATN). Children undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass surgery, stem cell transplantation, or with multiple organ dysfunction syndrome are at high risk for these events. A key feature in diagnosis and management includes identifying the presence of ATN versus a reversible hypovolemic state because patients with ATN may quickly develop
fluid overload
with overaggressive fluid therapy, requiring dialytic removal. Despite advances in acute pediatric dialysis therapy and in overall care of critically ill children, severe AKI still is associated with a high mortality rate, necessitating more research in early AKI identification and therapeutic trials.
...
PMID:Epidemiology and diagnosis of acute kidney injury. 1879 Mar 63
In the setting of
sepsis
and multiorgan dysfunction syndrome, the development of acute kidney injury can be an ominous event, particularly in the pediatric patient. In this setting, rapid initiation of renal supportive therapy is likely to positively impact on mortality rates. Therapeutic initiation and choice of dialytic modality are dependent on physician beliefs, as well as patient and organizational characteristics. Patient-specific factors including adequacy of nutrition provision, acuity of acute kidney injury, degree of uremia, and severity of
fluid overload
all must be taken into account during the decision on whether or not to initiate renal supportive therapies. In addition to the utilization of classical renal supportive modalities such as acute hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, and continuous renal replacement therapies, the increasing use of plasma exchange therapies and other alternatives are actively being explored for use in
sepsis
-associated acute kidney injury. This article reviews these concepts and current literature in the context of pediatric specific
sepsis
-associated acute kidney injury.
...
PMID:Renal supportive therapy for pediatric acute kidney injury in the setting of multiorgan dysfunction syndrome/sepsis. 1879 Mar 65
This Practice Point commentary discusses the findings from the secondary analysis of a large systematic cohort study of critically ill patients that evaluated the influence of
fluid overload
on outcomes from acute kidney injury (AKI). Payen et al. reported a 36% incidence of AKI among the 3,147 patients enrolled in the
Sepsis
Occurrence in Acutely Ill Patients (SOAP) study. Mortality rate at 60 days was more than twofold higher among patients who had AKI than among those without AKI. Among patients with AKI, mortality rates were increased in patients with oliguria and in those treated with renal replacement therapy. A positive fluid balance was an independent risk factor for 60-day mortality. The interpretation and implications of these findings for clinical practice are highlighted in this commentary. Fluid balance is probably an important factor that determines outcomes in patients with AKI who are in an intensive care unit, but additional studies are required to confirm these findings.
...
PMID:Fluid balance and acute kidney injury: the missing link for predicting adverse outcomes? 1853 29
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>