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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Solitary hepatic abscess has a favorable prognosis in contrast with multiple abscesses which generally are fatal. As compared with the classical cause of appendicitis, at present, abscesses are frequently related to biliary tract and
diverticular disease
. Occult or temporally remote processes are responsibile for many solitary abscesses. Lethality of multiple abscesses is related to fulminant hepatic and source
sepsis
, atypical syndromes, late diagnosis and difficult, complex treatment. Causative organisms are predominantly gram-negative and increasingly anaerobic, requiring special bacteriology for isolation. Various laboratory data are useful in diagnosis and prognosis, but liver scans and celiac angiography are critical procedures. Treatment aimed at lowering the mortality of multiple liver abscesses includes early diagnosis, surgical exploration and abscess drainage, direct bacterial identification emphasizing anaerobic techniques, intense specific antibiotic therapy and identification and definitive therapy of the seeding focus with special attention being given to the biliary tract.
...
PMID:Clinical aspects of grave pyogenic abscesses of the liver. 46 53
The purpose of this retrospective study is to define current indications and results of Hartmann's procedure (H). From 1978 to 1989, 86 H were performed, 52 (60%) as emergency surgery. Indications were: colo-rectal cancer (37): 15 complicated and 22 as an elective procedure,
diverticular disease
acute or complicated (24), ischemic colitis (10), volvulus of the pelvic colon (5), inflammatory bowel disease (4), colonic perforation (3), traumatic hematoma of the sigmoid mesocolon (1). Fourteen patients died after operation (mean age: 79). There was no death after elective H for cancer. Post-operative complications were numerous: pulmonary (25%), abdominal would
sepsis
or disruption (21%), rectal strump leakage (14%), the later being harmless due to the associated Mickulicz drainage. Seven patients were reoperated on for necrosis of the colonic stoma. Mean initial hospital stay was 31 days. Restoration of the gastrointestinal continuity was done in 27 cases (37% of the surviving patients, 76% of the diverticular diseases). The authors conclude that for complicated
diverticular disease
H procedure improves survival without preferable continuity. For cancer, H procedure is permanently compromising gastrointestinal in the elderly to hazardous low anastomosis, and to palliative abdomino-perineal resection.
...
PMID:[Hartmann's procedure. A retrospective study of 86 cases]. 144 49
Generalized faecal peritonitis is associated with a mortality of over 50% in most series of cases. Despite great improvements in the standards of intensive care the morbidity and mortality associated with this condition have not improved, in part due to recurrent intra-abdominal
sepsis
. This preliminary study investigated the role of laparotomy, repeated abdominal lavage and debridement to determine whether such a policy might lead to an improvement in outcome. Of six cases studied three had perforated
diverticular disease
, two had Crohn's disease. Twenty lavages were performed on these six patients who had a mean ICU stay of 8 days. Five out of the six patients left hospital and remain well, one patient died of septicaemia and pre-existing renal failure. This study found that laparotomy, repeated abdominal lavage and debridement may be effective in reducing the morbidity and mortality of generalized faecal peritonitis and further study of this technique is appropriate.
...
PMID:Management of generalized faecal peritonitis--can we do better? 129 27
Cecal diverticulitis is a rare entity and remains a difficult diagnostic problem. A retrospective review was undertaken of 16 patients (11 men, 5 women; average age, 33.2 years) with a pathologic diagnosis of cecal or right colon
diverticulosis
who received treatment from 1979 to the present. Preoperative symptoms were difficult to distinguish from appendicitis. The majority complained of right lower quadrant pain and tenderness. Diagnostic studies were not helpful. Preoperative diagnosis was appendicitis in 88% (14 of 16) and correct in 1 patient (6%). At exploratory celiotomy, the surgeon was able to make the diagnosis of cecal diverticulitis in 9 (60%) of the 15 patients in whom the correct diagnosis had not been made preoperatively. Neoplasm was suspected in 5 patients, and an appendiceal abscess was suspected in 1. Treatment was colectomy in 9 and local excision in 4 patients. In 3 patients, the inflamed diverticulum was left in situ at initial exploration; all underwent later excision, one of these urgently for
sepsis
. No patient died; however, one anastomotic leak requiring reoperation occurred. On the basis of this experience, we recommend excisional therapy in all cases in which the intraoperative diagnosis is certain. Suspicion of a neoplastic process continues to prompt colectomy in an emergency setting.
...
PMID:Cecal diverticulitis: a continuing diagnostic dilemma. 141 51
Surgical intervention after vascular surgery usually occurs as a result of bleeding or thrombosis, whereas general surgical problems requiring operation after vascular surgery are unusual. The purpose of this study was to review the results of operations for general surgical problems done soon after major vascular surgery. From January 1985 to December 1989, 1,236 major vascular procedures were performed, and 15 patients developed significant postoperative general surgical problems including perforated duodenal ulcer (2), perforated
diverticular disease
(2), evisceration and dehiscence (2), liver infarct (1), gangrenous cholecystitis (2), clostridial myonecrosis (1), pseudomembranous colitis (1), and small bowel obstruction (4). The overall mortality was very high (47%), and the chance of dying was significantly higher (p less than 0.05) if the initial vascular procedure was an emergency (100% mortality). All the patients who died (n = 7) succumbed to
sepsis
. There was a long delay in diagnosis in all groups; however, the delay did not correlate with mortality. Although this is a study of a small group of patients with a very heterogenous group of complications, several observations can be made: (1) a general surgical problem after vascular surgery carries a very high mortality; (2) general surgical complications in postoperative vascular patients in whom the initial procedure was an emergency are very poorly tolerated and almost uniformly lethal; and (3) these elderly patients have multiple medical problems and seem unlikely to tolerate any septic insult.
...
PMID:General surgical problems requiring operation in postoperative vascular surgery patients. 192 85
Ninety-three patients who underwent surgery were studied retrospectively over a five-year period for complications of
diverticular disease
, including free perforation in 32 patients (with fecal peritonitis in 8), inflammation or peritonitis in 22 patients, an abscess in 11 patients, and intestinal obstruction in 14 patients. Sixty-eight patients (73 percent) had systemic symptoms and signs consistent with serious
sepsis
. There has been a growing popularity of the Hartmann procedure throughout the study period. The overall 30-day mortality rate was 10.8 percent. Because of a high proportion of poor-risk patients, the Hartmann group fared particularly badly compared with those who had other operations, with a 28 percent mortality rate, 69 percent incidence of major complications, and one third of the survivors having a permanent colostomy. Other operative procedures are discussed, but until prospective data become available, it is unlikely that the widespread popularity of the Hartmann procedure will decline. Therefore, the importance of meticulous attention to technical detail is stressed if results are to improve.
...
PMID:Emergency surgery for complicated diverticular disease. A five-year experience. 279 71
Colon perforation in renal transplant recipients is a potentially lethal condition that is amenable to appropriate medical and surgical treatment. The 11 cases seen at the Cleveland Clinic (incidence 1.1% of all renal transplant patients) and previous reports in the literature have been reviewed. The pathogenesis is related to a high incidence of
diverticular disease
in patients with polycystic kidneys and/or chronic renal failure, the effects of long-term immunosuppression, and the transplant procedure itself. The high mortality of this condition (61% overall) is related to the effects of immunosuppression on the response to
sepsis
and the surgical procedure used. Mortality has fallen from 88% (1970-1974) to 53% (1975-1979), and there are indications that it is continuing to fall. All four cases operated on here since 1980 have survived, giving a total operative mortality of 2/6, and all have maintained excellent allograft function. A high clinical index of suspicion, prompt exteriorization of the perforated colon, reduction of immunosuppression to minimal levels, and effective antibiotic coverage have all contributed to the declining mortality.
...
PMID:Perforation of the colon in renal homograft recipients. A report of 11 cases and a review of the literature. 307 96
A retrospective study is presented of 200 cases of
diverticular disease
admitted to Auckland Hospital over the 6-year period 1979-84. The epidemiology of the total group, the mode or type of presentation, pathology and investigative practice have been examined. Seventy-six patients required surgical intervention either electively or as an emergency and these cases have been considered in detail. The surgical group included 44 men and 32 women; 21 patients presented for elective resection, and 55 patients underwent surgery during their emergency admission. In the emergency group, 20 laparotomies were performed for pericolic/pelvic abscesses, five for small/large bowel obstruction, 30 for peritonitis and only one laparotomy was performed for haemorrhage. The mortality for the entire group was 4% with all deaths occurring in the acute diverticulitis group. Three deaths followed emergency surgery and a further five patients died without coming to surgery, the diagnosis of acute diverticulitis being made only at post-mortem. Overall, 44% of cases of acute diverticulitis underwent emergency surgery and a further 6% required surgery over the next 1-5 years. Resectional surgery was practised widely in the emergency group (the most common being Hartmann's operation). Less radical surgery is also preferred for localized
sepsis
in selected cases. The mortality was confined to patients who did not undergo resection of the septic focus. The elective group (24 patients) usually presented as a result of stricture, or chronic symptoms, and these patients generally did well with elective resection. The group of patients presenting with colonic bleeding behaved in a very benign manner. There was no mortality and only one patient required emergency surgery for bleeding.
...
PMID:Diverticular disease in Auckland. 315 Jun 60
The experience of 66 cases of colovesical fistula is reported. The most common cause was
diverticular disease
(71%), the remainder being due to malignancy, Crohn's disease, radiotherapy, appendicitis and trauma. The most sensitive investigation was barium enema, which was abnormal in 98% and actually showed the fistula in 57%. In 32 patients a single stage resection was performed, without mortality or significant morbidity and we would advocate this form of treatment for fistulae which are not complicated by gross
sepsis
or obstruction.
...
PMID:Colovesical fistula. 363 73
The experience with 59 patients affected by
diverticular disease
who underwent surgery after failure of medical treatment, is reported. 40 patients showed one or more postoperative complications, 19 none. The operations performed were: in 46 cases one-stage resection with anastomosis, Hartmann's operation in 8 and other procedures in 5. Six patients died: 3 after Harmann's operation, 2 after colostomy and one after anastomosis. The mean stay in bed for complicated cases was 24 days after anastomosis and 36 after Hartmann's operation. Therefore anastomosis is preferred in all cases including those with stenosis, fistula or abscess provided that peritonitis is not present. The anastomosis is performed away from the site of abdominal
sepsis
. In cases with peritonitis the selected surgical procedure is usually Hartmann's operation.
...
PMID:One-stage operation for diverticular disease. 366 6
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