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

We compared the time course of plasma and pulmonary lymph levels of thromboxane B2 (TxB2) and 6-keto-prostaglandin (PG)F1 alpha during the development of either the hyperdynamic phase of sepsis or of the multiple organ failure syndrome (MOFS) associated with sepsis in 26 chronically instrumented awake sheep with intravascular catheters and a chronic pulmonary lymph fistula. Using a continuous i.v. infusion of Escherichia coli endotoxin administered at a rate of 20 ng.kg-1.min-1 (group E20, n = 9) resulted in hyperdynamic septic shock with more than 75% of animals surviving after 72 h of continuous endotoxin administration. Infusing endotoxin at a higher dosage (40 ng.kg-1.min-1; group E40, n = 9) resulted in the development of respiratory failure and MOFS with death occurring within 55 hr of endotoxemia. Eight similarly instrumented sheep served as controls. Administration of endotoxin produced within 4 hr in both endotoxin groups a significant increase in arterial plasma concentration of TxB2, which was not significantly different between both endotoxin groups. Thereafter, plasma TxB2 concentrations progressively decreased in the E20 group to reach at 36 hr values significantly lower than those measured in control sheep not given endotoxin. In the E40 group, plasma TxB2 concentrations returned to baseline values during the development of a MOFS. The time course of TxB2 concentrations in pulmonary lymph in both endotoxin groups was similar to that measured in each group in plasma. 6-Keto-PGF1 alpha concentrations in arterial plasma and pulmonary lymph were significantly higher than in controls during the first 20 hr following the start of endotoxin infusion in both endotoxin groups and were not different between these groups. Thereafter, plasma and pulmonary lymph 6-keto-PGF1 alpha concentrations progressively returned to baseline values in the E20 group and remained at these levels up to the end of the study period (72 hr). In the E40 group, plasma 6-keto-PGF1 alpha concentrations also decreased to baseline values during the second day of endotoxemia but then significantly increased in sheep that survived more than 36 hr and developed a hypodynamic septic state. During the first 24 hr of endotoxemia, the plasma TxB2/6-keto-PGF1 alpha ratio was similar in controls and in both endotoxin groups. During the second study day, TxB2/6-keto-PGF1 alpha ratio progressively decreased in both endotoxin groups to reach and maintain values significantly lower than those measured in controls at 36 hr in the E40 group and at 52 hr in E20 group.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Imbalance between plasma levels of thromboxane B2 and 6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha during subacute endotoxin-induced hyperdynamic sepsis or multiple organ failure syndrome in sheep. 177 48

During a 12-year period 419 patients were admitted because of acute renal failure requiring dialysis. Fifty (12%) had septicemia verified by blood culture. In a retrospective study age, sex, focus of infection, blood culture results, kidney function, mode of dialysis treatment, numbers and durations of complicating organ failures, presence of gastrointestinal bleeding, and secondary complicating events of septicemia were recorded for the purpose of establishing a prognostic index based on clinical criteria. Respiratory failure was present in 34 patients, circulatory failure in 31 patients, failure of coagulation system in 25 patients, and hepatic failure in 10 patients. Overall mortality was 46%. Highest death-rates were found during the first days of dialysis. In patients with multiple organ failures, in elderly and in patients suffering from staphylococcus aureus septicemia, a non-significant trend towards higher mortality was found. The mode of dialysis treatment did not influence patient survival. Our intention of establishing a prognostic index based on bedside clinical criteria has not been fulfilled. Even though mortality-rate increases in patients with acute renal failure complicated by failure of one or more vital organs, survival-rate in patients with four or more organ failures was 30%.
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PMID:Prognosis in septicemia complicated by acute renal failure requiring dialysis. 178 Jul 7

Nebulized beclomethasone dipropionate was administered to six anesthetized and artificially ventilated pigs at 6-hourly intervals after infusion of live S. aureus (aerosol group). Changes in pulmonary mechanics, gas exchange and hemodynamics during an observation period of 44 h were compared with those in six pigs subjected to the same insults but given no corticosteroid (non-treatment group). Six pigs served as controls, without sepsis or aerosol, but with the same general management (control group). The septic insult induced an acute 3-fold increase in mean pulmonary artery pressure (MPAP) in the aerosol and non-treatment group. MPAP fell to near baseline levels in the aerosol group, but remained significantly higher in the non-treatment group. Mean systemic arterial pressure fell more in the non-treatment than in the aerosol group, reaching its lowest level at 32 h. Pulmonary function was less affected in the aerosol group, with significantly better maintenance of arterial oxygenation, lower venous admixture and superior lung-thorax compliance than in the non-treatment group. Survival was significantly improved in the aerosol group. In this porcine model of septicemia-induced adult respiratory distress syndrome, nebulized corticosteroid thus attenuated the development of respiratory failure.
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PMID:Nebulized corticosteroid improves pulmonary function and outcome in experimental porcine septicemia. 178 44

An analysis of 80 immunocompromised patients who were admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) was made. It was 3 different groups: those treated chronically with more than 20 mg of prednisone or it's equivalent, patients with severe neutropenia (-500 PMN'S/mm3) and patients with AIDS. The reasons for admittance to the ICU were: pneumonia (51.2%), postoperative care (30%) extrapulmonary sepsis (8.7%) and other causes in 10%. Mortality was 62.5%. It was statistically higher in those that were admitted for pneumonia, developed respiratory failure, and required postoperative care after emergency surgery (80%, 89.5% and 70% respectively). Also in patients with multiple organic failure (3.2 +/- 1.6 vs 0.9 +/- 1.2 in survivors) and with higher APACHE II score (24 +/- 7 vs 15.4 +/- 6 in survivors). The mortality for acute respiratory failure, the principal organic failure observed, according to the primary diagnosis was: AIDS 100%, severe neutropenia 85.7% and chronic use of steroids in 85.7% of the patients.
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PMID:[The prognosis for the immunocompromised host in an intensive care unit. A report of 80 cases]. 179 Aug 38

Twenty years have now elapsed since Ashbaugh and Petty first described the syndrome of acute respiratory failure associated with a wide spectrum of clinical conditions. During the past two decades, significant advances have emerged in our understanding of the clinical conditions associated with the syndrome and the pathophysiological changes affecting the alveolar-capillary membrane responsible for the characteristic non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema. Recent data have reaffirmed the notion that mortality rates in ARDS remain in excess of 60 percent, essentially unchanged since the first description of the syndrome, despite all the advances in critical care medicine in the intervening years. The incidence of ARDS has been difficult to establish because of lack of agreement on precise definition criteria. The lack of agreed definition criteria has hampered evaluation of the natural history of the syndrome, its epidemiology and mortality rates, and the efficacy or otherwise of a variety of therapeutic interventions. This review will highlight a recent, clinically appropriate, expanded definition of ARDS. New understandings of the roles of sepsis and multi-system organ failure in mortality associated with ARDS will be discussed. Several mediators, both locally in the lung and in the systemic circulation, have been implicated in the pathophysiology of ARDS. This review will discuss the evidence for and against neutrophils, platelets, cytokines derived from mononuclear cells and macrophages, complement, prostaglandins/leukotrienes, oxygen-derived radicals, and a variety of proteases. Current treatment strategies for ARDS are designed to increase tissue oxygen delivery by increasing arterial oxygen tension and cardiac output while simultaneously attenuating the pulmonary and systemic injury by appropriate pharmacologic and surgical interventions. Recent data advocating pharmacological augmentation of cardiac index and oxygen delivery will be highlighted. The persistently high mortality rates of 60-70 percent in patients with established ARDS have provoked recurring interest in new techniques of providing mechanical ventilation. Most studies have shown, however, that mortality in ARDS patients is attributable mainly to sepsis and multi-system organ failure rather than primarily to respiratory failure. Established and speculative intervention to reduce sepsis and multi-system organ failure associated with ARDS will be featured in the review.
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PMID:Acute respiratory distress syndrome--two decades later. 181 55

Thoracoabdominal aortic reconstruction distal to the left subclavian artery was carried out on 19 patients between 1974 and 1990. Screening procedures to detect cardiac, respiratory or renal impairment were undertaken in all patients. Reconstruction was in the upper third of the descending aorta in 6 patients, middle third in 6 patients, and lower third in 7 patients. The Crawford inclusion technique was used in all cases. There were six deaths, four of which were from the high reconstruction group, and one each from the middle and lower group. Paraparesis occurred in 4 patients, 2 of whom survived with some impairment. Temporary renal failure was seen in 2 patients, liver failure in 2, respiratory failure in 2, sepsis in 1, myocardial infarction in 1, and severe coagulopathy in 3. The perioperative mortality rate was 32% for the group as a whole and 15% for reconstructions which started at the middle or lower thoracic level. We conclude that the mortality rate for the middle and lower reconstructions is acceptable but that alternative techniques for the high aneurysms should be sought.
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PMID:Thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm reconstruction. 183 77

The incidence and outcome of streptococcal septicemia was analyzed in 76 consecutive patients with newly diagnosed and relapsed acute myeloid leukemia. They received 215 courses of remission induction or intensive consolidation treatment. There were 31 different episodes of streptococcal septicemia in 27 patients, making these microorganisms the most frequently encountered bacteria in blood cultures. This high incidence coincided with the introduction of selective intestinal decontamination. In 24 episodes (20 patients) there was a fast recovery, but 7 patients developed pulmonary symptoms resulting in death due to respiratory failure in 5 of them. The infections all occurred in the phase of maximum bone marrow suppression 1-3 weeks after the start of the chemotherapy. Streptococcal septicemia was not limited to patients treated with cytosine arabinoside but also occurred in patients treated with other regimens of intensive chemotherapy. In 28 episodes there were no focal signs of infection, but in half there were symptoms of treatment induced gastrointestinal toxicity. The streptococci probably invade through oral and gastrointestinal mucosa damaged by the chemotherapy. Selective decontamination may play a promoting role.
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PMID:Incidence and clinical epidemiology of streptococcal septicemia during treatment of acute myeloid leukemia. 185 64

Most patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) survive the initial insult which caused respiratory failure only to succumb later to sepsis caused by nosocomial pneumonia or to pulmonary fibrosis. Clinical criteria and analysis of the tracheal aspirate are notoriously inadequate for establishing a diagnosis of ventilator-associated pneumonia. We implemented a comprehensive diagnostic protocol to determine the cause of sepsis in ARDS patients who had been ventilated for more than three days and who had no bronchoscopic evidence of pneumonia. Nine patients with late ARDS who had fever (89 percent), leukocytosis (89 percent), a new localized infiltrate (78 percent), purulent tracheal secretions (89 percent), low systemic vascular resistance (50 percent), and marked uptake of gallium in the lungs (100 percent) had no source of infection identified. Open-lung biopsy specimens from seven patients showed the fibroproliferative phase of diffuse alveolar damage and confirmed absence of pneumonia. Treatment with prolonged high doses of corticosteroids was associated with a marked and rapid improvement in lung injury score (p less than 0.003 at five days). Our findings indicate that the fibroproliferative process occurring in the lungs of patients with late ARDS gives rise to clinical manifestations identical to those of pneumonia and is potentially responsive to steroid treatment.
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PMID:Fibroproliferative phase of ARDS. Clinical findings and effects of corticosteroids. 191

Twenty-five pediatric orthotopic liver transplantations (OLTs) performed in 22 patients at Sainte-Justine Hospital were reviewed for infections complications. One patient died within 12 hours posttransplantation and is excluded. The patients had an average age of 6.1 years (range, 1.25 to 19 years) and an average weight of 20.4 kg (range, 11 to 55 kg). Two patients (9%) were cytomegalovirus (CMV) seropositive and 9 of 19 patients (48%) were Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) seropositive preoperatively. Five of the donors (20%) were CMV seropositive. The most common indications for OLT were biliary atresia (8) and tyrosinemia (7). There were 4 deaths, for an overall mortality rate of 19%. In 3 patients, deaths were related to infection (CMV hepatitis and duodenitis with aortoduodenal fistula, adult respiratory distress syndrome [ARDS] with Streptococcus viridans pneumonia, Escherichia coli cholangitis with progressive hepatic failure). Fifteen patients (72%) had 41 major infections, most of them bacterial, during the first month posttransplantation. These include pneumonia (25%), line sepsis (17%), cholangitis (14%), and tracheitis (14%). There was only one major viral infection, a CMV hepatitis that occurred in the first month posttransplantation. Three patients had fungal infections (8%) associated with hepatic artery thrombosis and recurrent cholangitis. All three patients required retransplantation. There was only one protozoal infection (Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia) causing life-threatening respiratory failure, from which patient recovered without sequelae. Infection still remains a serious complication of OLT. Bacterial infection is common and is usually associated with technical complications. The low rate of CMV infection is related to low incidence of CMV in the donor pool and the minimal use of strong immunosuppressants.
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PMID:Infectious complications of pediatric liver transplantation. 191 82

The leading cause of death in the pediatric population in the United States is trauma. A retrospective review of patients treated with extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) for traumatic respiratory failure was performed. Eight children were treated at the Ochsner Medical Foundation and additional data on six children were available from the National Registry. Six children developed respiratory failure as a result of blunt trauma and eight as a result of near drowning. Standard venoarterial ECMO was used with a circuit very similar to that used in neonatal ECMO. Vascular access was via the common carotid artery and the internal jugular vein. Ventilatory support was weaned to minimal settings during ECMO. Central hyperalimentation and systemic antibiotics were used in all of the cases. Four of six children survived in the blunt trauma group; three of eight children survived in the near drowning group. Although significant conclusions cannot be drawn from a small group of patients the average pre-ECMO PO2 for survivors was 87 mm Hg, whereas for nonsurvivors the average PO2 was only 46 mm Hg. Ventilatory support for both groups was not remarkably different, and the average PCO2 was lower in the nonsurvivor group. The cause of death in this group of patients is usually multisystem organ failure. In the four patients treated at Ochsner who did not survive, all had positive blood cultures and presumed systemic sepsis. ECMO has been demonstrated to be very successful in neonatal respiratory failure. Predicting mortality and morbidity in pediatric respiratory failure has been more difficult.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Pediatric extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in posttraumatic respiratory failure. 194 75


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