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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors studied the frequency of sinusitis in nasotracheally intubated patients in an Intensive Care Unit. All patients intubated nasotracheally during an 8 day period were included in a prospective study which included CT scanning with views of all the paranasal sinuses. Sinusitis was defined as opacification of the sinus with an air-fluid level. Transantral punctures were performed in cases of maxillary sinusitis. Fifty-three patients were included. Local symptoms and/or unexplained fever were present in 22% of cases. CT scanning showed sinusitis in 49 of the 53 cases (pansinusitis 42 cases, maxillary alone 5 cases, sphenoidal 16 cases). Bacteriological cultures of sinus punctures were positive in 39 cases, monomicrobial in 21 and polymicrobial in 18 cases. Twenty of the 53 patients developed a lower respiratory tract infection with the same germ and 10 developed
septicemia
(3 with isolated sinusitis and 7 with pneumonia). Eighteen patients died (6 of their infection and 12 of the underlying disease). This study shows the high frequency of
bacterial sinusitis
and the necessity of sinus puncture for bacteriological identification of the causal organism to adapt antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:[Nosocomial sinusitis and nasotracheal intubation. Prospective study of 53 patients]. 274 57
Hospital infectious sinusitis resulting from nasotracheal intubation is common. A prospective study was undertaken between October 1986 and January 1988 of 46 patients who had undergone nasotracheal intubation. CT scan revealed sinusitis in 43 cases with sinus puncture proving the existence of
bacterial sinusitis
in 36 cases. Gram negative bacilli predominated. In 21 cases the existence of a complication (chest infection and/or
septicemia
) raised the possibility of the role played by sinusitis in their etiology. The prevalence of gram negative bacilli sinusitis in patients with a nasotracheal tube is felt to require the following from the 8th day onwards: a CT scan to detect the existence of sinusitis, sinus puncture for bacteriological identification of the organism.
...
PMID:[Nosocomial sinusitis in an intensive care unit. Role of nasotracheal intubation]. 306 73
Sinusitis is a complication known to accompany nasotracheal intubation, but its frequency has not been well established. During a two-year-period, 1,126 patients in an intensive care unit have been studied. Twenty-seven of them (2%) developed a
bacterial sinusitis
. The diagnosis is established on the basis of an unexplained clinical
sepsis
, imaging evidence of fluid in the maxillary sinus, and antral puncture. Microbiological samples showed Gram-negative micro-organisms, in particular Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and an elevated percentage of Staphylococcus aureus and Escherichia coli. The likely predisposing factors (nasogastric and/or nasotracheal tubes) are discussed. Aetiology, diagnosis and management of the disease are discussed in detail. The importance of prompt removal of nasal instrumentation and of early sinus drainage, in addition to broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy, is emphasized.
...
PMID:Sinus infection in intensive care patients. 905 Jan 3
The prompt identification of
sepsis
in children is challenging, but once
sepsis
is identified, initiation of care and determination of proper disposition may be insufficient to ensure optimal outcomes. The best opportunity for full recovery also requires rapid identification and treatment of the infectious source. Acute bacterial sinusitis is common in the pediatric population, and although intracranial complications of sinusitis are rare, they are associated with significant morbidity and mortality. History and physical examination may be imperfectly sensitive for the presence of acute
bacterial sinusitis
and its intracranial complications. We present a case of pediatric
sepsis
in which the diagnosis of intracranial extension of
bacterial sinusitis
was not made during the first phase of care and describe complications that followed. Emergency physicians should consider subdural empyema in patients presenting with fever, nausea and headache with worrisome vital signs and laboratory values suggestive of a severe infection.
...
PMID:Delayed Diagnosis of Subdural Empyema in a Septic Child. 2623 Jan 10